153 research outputs found
Linking mechanistic and behavioral responses to sublethal esfenvalerate exposure in the endangered delta smelt; Hypomesus transpacificus (Fam. Osmeridae)
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The delta smelt (<it>Hypomesus transpacificus</it>) is a pelagic fish species listed as endangered under both the USA Federal and Californian State Endangered Species Acts and considered an indicator of ecosystem health in its habitat range, which is limited to the Sacramento-San Joaquin estuary in California, USA. Anthropogenic contaminants are one of multiple stressors affecting this system, and among them, current-use insecticides are of major concern. Interrogative tools are required to successfully monitor effects of contaminants on the delta smelt, and to research potential causes of population decline in this species. We have created a microarray to investigate genome-wide effects of potentially causative stressors, and applied this tool to assess effects of the pyrethroid insecticide esfenvalerate on larval delta smelt. Selected genes were further investigated as molecular biomarkers using quantitative PCR analyses.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Exposure to esfenvalerate affected swimming behavior of larval delta smelt at concentrations as low as 0.0625 μg.L<sup>-1</sup>, and significant differences in expression were measured in genes involved in neuromuscular activity. Alterations in the expression of genes associated with immune responses, along with apoptosis, redox, osmotic stress, detoxification, and growth and development appear to have been invoked by esfenvalerate exposure. Swimming impairment correlated significantly with expression of aspartoacylase (ASPA), an enzyme involved in brain cell function and associated with numerous human diseases. Selected genes were investigated for their use as molecular biomarkers, and strong links were determined between measured downregulation in ASPA and observed behavioral responses in fish exposed to environmentally relevant pyrethroid concentrations.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The results of this study show that microarray technology is a useful approach in screening for, and generation of molecular biomarkers in endangered, non-model organisms, identifying specific genes that can be directly linked with sublethal toxicological endpoints; such as changes in expression levels of neuromuscular genes resulting in measurable swimming impairments. The developed microarrays were successfully applied on larval fish exposed to esfenvalerate, a known contaminant of the Sacramento-San Joaquin estuary, and has permitted the identification of specific biomarkers which could provide insight into the factors contributing to delta smelt population decline.</p
Novel insights into iron metabolism by integrating deletome and transcriptome analysis in an iron deficiency model of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Iron-deficiency anemia is the most prevalent form of anemia world-wide. The yeast <it>Saccharomyces cerevisiae </it>has been used as a model of cellular iron deficiency, in part because many of its cellular pathways are conserved. To better understand how cells respond to changes in iron availability, we profiled the yeast genome with a parallel analysis of homozygous deletion mutants to identify essential components and cellular processes required for optimal growth under iron-limited conditions. To complement this analysis, we compared those genes identified as important for fitness to those that were differentially-expressed in the same conditions. The resulting analysis provides a global perspective on the cellular processes involved in iron metabolism.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Using functional profiling, we identified several genes known to be involved in high affinity iron uptake, in addition to novel genes that may play a role in iron metabolism. Our results provide support for the primary involvement in iron homeostasis of vacuolar and endosomal compartments, as well as vesicular transport to and from these compartments. We also observed an unexpected importance of the peroxisome for growth in iron-limited media. Although these components were essential for growth in low-iron conditions, most of them were not differentially-expressed. Genes with altered expression in iron deficiency were mainly associated with iron uptake and transport mechanisms, with little overlap with those that were functionally required. To better understand this relationship, we used expression-profiling of selected mutants that exhibited slow growth in iron-deficient conditions, and as a result, obtained additional insight into the roles of <it>CTI6</it>, <it>DAP1</it>, <it>MRS4 </it>and <it>YHR045W </it>in iron metabolism.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Comparison between functional and gene expression data in iron deficiency highlighted the complementary utility of these two approaches to identify important functional components. This should be taken into consideration when designing and analyzing data from these type of studies. We used this and other published data to develop a molecular interaction network of iron metabolism in yeast.</p
Gene expression profiling in wild-type and metallothionein mutant fibroblast cell lines
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Electron microscopy evidence of gadolinium toxicity being mediated through cytoplasmic membrane dysregulation
Past functional toxicogenomic studies have indicated that genes relevant to membrane lipid synthesis are important for tolerance to the lanthanides. Moreover, previously reported imaging of patient's brains following administration of gadolinium-based contrast agents shows gadolinium lining the vessels of the brain. Taken together, these findings suggest the disruption of cytoplasmic membrane integrity as a mechanism by which lanthanides induce cytotoxicity. In the presented work we used scanning transmission electron microscopy and spatially resolved elemental spectroscopy to image the morphology and composition of gadolinium, europium, and samarium precipitates that formed on the outside of yeast cell membranes. In no sample did we find that the lanthanide contaminant had crossed the cell membrane, even in experiments using yeast mutants with disrupted genes for sphingolipid synthesis-the primary lipids found in yeast cytoplasmic membranes. Rather, we have evidence that lanthanides are co-located with phosphorus outside the yeast cells. These results lead us to hypothesize that the lanthanides scavenge or otherwise form complexes with phosphorus from the sphingophospholipid head groups in the cellular membrane, thereby compromising the structure or function of the membrane, and gaining the ability to disrupt membrane function without entering the cell
Gene expression profiling in wild-type and metallothionein mutant fibroblast cell lines
The role of metallothioneins (MT) in copper homeostasis is of great interest, as it appears to be partially
responsible for the regulation of intracellular copper levels during adaptation to extracellular excess of the
metal. To further investigate a possible role of MTs in copper metabolism, a genomics approach was utilized
to evaluate the role of MT on gene expression. Microarray analysis was used to examine the effects of copper
overload in fibroblast cells from normal and MT I and II double knock-out mice (MT-/-). As a first step, we
compared genes that were significantly upregulated in wild-type and MT-/- cells exposed to copper. Even
though wild-type and mutant cells are undistinguishable in terms of their morphological features and rates of
growth, our results show that MT-/- cells do not respond with induction of typical markers of cellular stress
under copper excess conditions, as observed in the wild-type cell line, suggesting that the transcription
initiation rate or the mRNA stability of stress genes is affected when there is an alteration in the copper store
capacity. The functional classification of other up-regulated genes in both cell lines indicates that a large
proportion (>80%) belong to two major categories: 1) metabolism; and 2) cellular physiological processes,
suggesting that at the transcriptional level copper overload induces the expression of genes associated with
diverse molecular functions. These results open the possibility to understand how copper homeostasis is being
coordinated with other metabolic pathways
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