Searched for: school:SOM
Department/Unit:Cell Biology
Two novel missense mutations in the CETP gene in Japanese hyperalphalipoproteinemic subjects: high-throughput assay by Invader assay
Nagano, Makoto; Yamashita, Shizuya; Hirano, Ken-ichi; Ito, Mayumi; Maruyama, Takao; Ishihara, Mitsuaki; Sagehashi, Yukiko; Oka, Tomoichiro; Kujiraoka, Takeshi; Hattori, Hiroaki; Nakajima, Norimichi; Egashira, Tohru; Kondo, Masatoshi; Sakai, Naohiko; Matsuzawa, Yuji
Cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP) deficiency is one of the most important and common causes of hyperalphalipoproteinemia (HALP) in the Japanese. CETP deficiency is thought to be a state of impaired reverse cholesterol transport, which may possibly lead to the development of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease despite high HDL-cholesterol (HDL-C) levels. Thus, it is important to investigate whether HALP is caused by CETP deficiency. In the present study, we identified two novel missense mutations in the CETP gene among 196 subjects with a marked HALP (HDL-C > or = 2.59 mmol/l = 100 mg/dl). The two missense mutations, L151P (CTC-->CCC in exon 5) and R282C (CGC-->TGC in exon 9), were found in compound heterozygous subjects with D442G mutation, whose plasma CETP levels were significantly lower when compared with those in D442G heterozygous subjects. In COS-7 cells expressing the wild type and mutant CETP, these two mutant CETP showed a marked reduction in the secretion of CETP protein into media (0% and 39% of wild type for L151P and R282C, respectively). These results suggested that two novel missense mutations cause the decreased secretion of CETP protein into circulation leading to HALP. By using the Invader assay for seven mutations, including two novel mutations of the CETP gene, we investigated their frequency among 466 unrelated subjects with HALP (HDL-C > or = 2.07 mmol/l = 80 mg/dl). Two novel mutations were rare, but L151P mutation was found in unrelated subjects with a marked HALP. Furthermore, we demonstrated that CETP deficiency contributes to 61.7% and 31.4% of marked HALP and moderate HALP in the Japanese, respectively
PMID: 12091484
ISSN: 0022-2275
CID: 81108
Quantitation of beta-cleaved carboxy-terminal fragments of APP with a novel ELISA [Meeting Abstract]
Jiang, Y; Schmidt, SD; Mercken, M; Mathews, PM; Nixon, RA
ISI:000177465300064
ISSN: 0197-4580
CID: 32406
HDL-holoparticle uptake by alveolar type II cells: effect of vitamin E status
Kolleck, Ingrid; Wissel, Heide; Guthmann, Florian; Schlame, Michael; Sinha, Pranav; Rustow, Bernd
Alveolar type II cells accumulate vitamin E preferentially from high-density lipoproteins (HDL) and express at least three receptors that are specific for HDL. The expression of these receptors increases in response to vitamin E deficiency. Beside receptors for specific lipid transfer from HDL, cubilin and megalin, several other receptors that mediate HDL-particle uptake were found in the lung. We hypothesize that alveolar type II cells also exhibit the HDL-particle uptake and that this process can be regulated by the vitamin E status. By confocal laser microscopy and flow cytometry we showed that type II cells accumulate protein-labeled HDL-particle. Vitamin E depletion in rats increased HDL-particle uptake in alveolar type II cells and the expression of megalin. The expression of cubilin did not change. Refeeding with vitamin E reversed HDL-particle uptake and megalin expression. Long-time incubation of type II cells with phorbol myristyl acetate (PMA) reduced HDL-holoparticle uptake and megalin expression. We assume that alveolar type II cells exhibit HDL-holoparticle uptake mediated by megalin and cubilin. Megalin represents the regulated element of the megalin/cubilin receptor-cooperation and can be modulated by protein kinase C
PMID: 12091246
ISSN: 1044-1549
CID: 49195
Autophagy-dependent generation of the amyloid-beta (A beta) peptide [Meeting Abstract]
Yu, WH; Schmidt, SD; Jiang, Y; Mathews, PM; Nixon, RA; Hassinger, L; Cataldo, A
ISI:000177465300050
ISSN: 0197-4580
CID: 32404
Filamin A-interacting protein (FILIP) regulates cortical cell migration out of the ventricular zone
Nagano, Takashi; Yoneda, Takunari; Hatanaka, Yumiko; Kubota, Chikara; Murakami, Fujio; Sato, Makoto
Precisely regulated radial migration out of the ventricular zone is essential for corticogenesis. Here, we identify a mechanism that can tether ventricular zone cells in situ. FILIP interacts with Filamin A, an indispensable actin-binding protein that is required for cell motility, and induces its degradation in COS-7 cells. Degradation of Filamin A is identified in the cortical ventricular zone, where filip mRNA is localized. Furthermore, most ventricular zone cells that overexpress FILIP fail to migrate in explants. These results demonstrate that FILIP functions through a Filamin A F-actin axis to control the start of neocortical cell migration from the ventricular zone.
PMID: 12055638
ISSN: 1465-7392
CID: 2204042
Out of the mouths of baboons: stress, life history, and dental development in the Awash National Park hybrid zone, Ethiopia
Dirks, Wendy; Reid, Donald J; Jolly, Clifford J; Phillips-Conroy, Jane E; Brett, Frederick L
The techniques of dental histology provide a method for reconstructing much of the life history of an individual, as accentuated increments visible in polarized light microscopy record incidents of physiological stress during the formation of dental tissues. Combined with counts of the normal periodic growth increments, they provide a means of reconstructing the chronology of dental development, age at death, and the ages at which stress occurs. In this study, we determine age at death and reconstruct the chronology of dental development in two male anubis baboons from Uganda and two female baboons from the Awash National Park hybrid zone. For the female baboons, we used the dates of death and rainfall records for the region to determine date of birth, ages at periods of physiological stress, dates at which these stresses occurred, and rainfall amounts for those months. Ages determined histologically for each specimen are comparable to ages estimated from dental emergence schedules and dental scores for wild baboons. Crown formation times are longer than those reported in radiographic studies of captive yellow baboons. Age at initiation of crown formation is similar to that reported for radiographic studies, but ages at completion of crown formation are consistently later. The pattern of stresses is similar in the two female baboons, suggesting that individual life history intersects with local ecology to produce a pattern of accentuated increments occurring during the weaning process and at the onset of menarche, as well as during the first postweaning dry and rainy periods.
PMID: 12115280
ISSN: 0002-9483
CID: 311122
Hair vs. eccrine gland: Timing and competition of skin appendage specification on the limb [Meeting Abstract]
Loomis, C; Tong, C; Kraus, P
ISI:000177428100499
ISSN: 0022-202x
CID: 55288
Control of plant cytokinesis by an NPK1-mediated mitogen-activated protein kinase cascade
Soyano, Takashi; Ishikawa, Masaki; Nishihama, Ryuichi; Araki, Satoshi; Ito, Mayumi; Ito, Masaki; Machida, Yasunori
Cytokinesis is the last essential step in the distribution of genetic information to daughter cells and partition of the cytoplasm. In plant cells, various proteins have been found in the phragmoplast, which corresponds to the cytokinetic apparatus, and in the cell plate, which corresponds to a new cross wall, but our understanding of the functions of these proteins in cytokinesis remains incomplete. Reverse genetic analysis of NPK1 MAPKKK (nucleus- and phragmoplast-localized protein kinase 1 mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase) and investigations of factors that might be functionally related to NPK1 have helped to clarify new aspects of the mechanisms of cytokinesis in plant cells. In this review, we summarize the evidence for the involvement of NPK1 in cytokinesis. We also describe the characteristics of a kinesin-like protein and the homologue of a mitogen-activated protein kinase that we identified recently, and we discuss possible relationships among these proteins in cytokinesis
PMCID:1692986
PMID: 12079672
ISSN: 0962-8436
CID: 81107
Transmission of cell stress from endoplasmic reticulum to mitochondria: enhanced expression of Lon protease
Hori, O; Ichinoda, F; Tamatani, T; Yamaguchi, A; Sato, N; Ozawa, K; Kitao, Y; Miyazaki, M; Harding, HP; Ron, D; Tohyama, M; Stern, DM; Ogawa, S
T he rat homologue of a mitochondrial ATP-dependent protease Lon was cloned from cultured astrocytes exposed to hypoxia. Expression of Lon was enhanced in vitro by hypoxia or ER stress, and in vivo by brain ischemia. These observations suggested that changes in nuclear gene expression (Lon) triggered by ER stress had the potential to impact important mitochondrial processes such as assembly and/or degradation of cytochrome c oxidase (COX). In fact, steady-state levels of nuclear-encoded COX IV and V were reduced, and mitochondrial- encoded subunit II was rapidly degraded under ER stress. Treatment of cells with cycloheximide caused a similar imbalance in the accumulation of COX subunits, and enhanced mRNA for Lon and Yme1, the latter another mitochondrial ATP- dependent protease. Furthermore, induction of Lon or GRP75/mtHSP70 by ER stress was inhibited in PERK (-/-) cells. Transfection studies revealed that overexpression of wild-type or proteolytically inactive Lon promoted assembly of COX II into a COX 1-containing complex, and partially prevented mitochondrial dysfunction caused by brefeldin A or hypoxia. These observations demonstrated that suppression of protein synthesis due to ER stress has a complex effect on the synthesis of mitochondrial-associated proteins, both COX subunits and ATP-dependent proteases and/or chaperones contributing to assembly of the COX complex
ISI:000176528400005
ISSN: 0021-9525
CID: 30699
Proximal location of mouse prostate epithelial stem cells: a model of prostatic homeostasis
Tsujimura, Akira; Koikawa, Yasuhiro; Salm, Sarah; Takao, Tetsuya; Coetzee, Sandra; Moscatelli, David; Shapiro, Ellen; Lepor, Herbert; Sun, Tung-Tien; Wilson, E Lynette
Stem cells are believed to regulate normal prostatic homeostasis and to play a role in the etiology of prostate cancer and benign prostatic hyperplasia. We show here that the proximal region of mouse prostatic ducts is enriched in a subpopulation of epithelial cells that exhibit three important attributes of epithelial stem cells: they are slow cycling, possess a high in vitro proliferative potential, and can reconstitute highly branched glandular ductal structures in collagen gels. We propose a model of prostatic homeostasis in which mouse prostatic epithelial stem cells are concentrated in the proximal region of prostatic ducts while the transit-amplifying cells occupy the distal region of the ducts. This model can account for many biological differences between cells of the proximal and distal regions, and has implications for prostatic disease formation
PMCID:2173539
PMID: 12082083
ISSN: 0021-9525
CID: 32485