29 research outputs found

    Multiple Roles of Integrin-Linked Kinase in Epidermal Development, Maturation and Pigmentation Revealed by Molecular Profiling

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    Integrin-linked kinase (ILK) is an important scaffold protein that mediates a variety of cellular responses to integrin stimulation by extracellular matrix proteins. Mice with epidermis-restricted inactivation of the Ilk gene exhibit pleiotropic phenotypic defects, including impaired hair follicle morphogenesis, reduced epidermal adhesion to the basement membrane, compromised epidermal integrity, as well as wasting and failure to thrive leading to perinatal death. To better understand the underlying molecular mechanisms that cause such a broad range of alterations, we investigated the impact of Ilk gene inactivation on the epidermis transcriptome. Microarray analysis showed over 700 differentially regulated mRNAs encoding proteins involved in multiple aspects of epidermal function, including keratinocyte differentiation and barrier formation, inflammation, regeneration after injury, and fundamental epidermal developmental pathways. These studies also revealed potential effects on genes not previously implicated in ILK functions, including those important for melanocyte and melanoblast development and function, regulation of cytoskeletal dynamics, and homeobox genes. This study shows that ILK is a critical regulator of multiple aspects of epidermal function and homeostasis, and reveals the previously unreported involvement of ILK not only in epidermal differentiation and barrier formation, but also in melanocyte genesis and function

    Calcium-Activated Potassium Channels BK and IK1 Are Functionally Expressed in Human Gliomas but Do Not Regulate Cell Proliferation

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    Gliomas are morbid brain tumors that are extremely resistant to available chemotherapy and radiology treatments. Some studies have suggested that calcium-activated potassium channels contribute to the high proliferative potential of tumor cells, including gliomas. However, other publications demonstrated no role for these channels or even assigned them antitumorogenic properties. In this work we characterized the expression and functional contribution to proliferation of Ca2+-activated K+ channels in human glioblastoma cells. Quantitative RT-PCR detected transcripts for the big conductance (BK), intermediate conductance (IK1), and small conductance (SK2) K+ channels in two glioblastoma-derived cell lines and a surgical sample of glioblastoma multiforme. Functional expression of BK and IK1 in U251 and U87 glioma cell lines and primary glioma cultures was verified using whole-cell electrophysiological recordings. Inhibitors of BK (paxilline and penitrem A) and IK1 channels (clotrimazole and TRAM-34) reduced U251 and U87 proliferation in an additive fashion, while the selective blocker of SK channels UCL1848 had no effect. However, the antiproliferative properties of BK and IK1 inhibitors were seen at concentrations that were higher than those necessary to inhibit channel activity. To verify specificity of pharmacological agents, we downregulated BK and IK1 channels in U251 cells using gene-specific siRNAs. Although siRNA knockdowns caused strong reductions in the BK and IK1 current densities, neither single nor double gene silencing significantly affected rates of proliferation. Taken together, these results suggest that Ca2+-activated K+ channels do not play a critical role in proliferation of glioma cells and that the effects of pharmacological inhibitors occur through their off-target actions

    Two Distinct Modes of Hypoosmotic Medium-Induced Release of Excitatory Amino Acids and Taurine in the Rat Brain In Vivo

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    A variety of physiological and pathological factors induce cellular swelling in the brain. Changes in cell volume activate several types of ion channels, which mediate the release of inorganic and organic osmolytes and allow for compensatory cell volume decrease. Volume-regulated anion channels (VRAC) are thought to be responsible for the release of some of organic osmolytes, including the excitatory neurotransmitters glutamate and aspartate. In the present study, we compared the in vivo properties of the swelling-activated release of glutamate, aspartate, and another major brain osmolyte taurine. Cell swelling was induced by perfusion of hypoosmotic (low [NaCl]) medium via a microdialysis probe placed in the rat cortex. The hypoosmotic medium produced several-fold increases in the extracellular levels of glutamate, aspartate and taurine. However, the release of the excitatory amino acids differed from the release of taurine in several respects including: (i) kinetic properties, (ii) sensitivity to isoosmotic changes in [NaCl], and (iii) sensitivity to hydrogen peroxide, which is known to modulate VRAC. Consistent with the involvement of VRAC, hypoosmotic medium-induced release of the excitatory amino acids was inhibited by the anion channel blocker DNDS, but not by the glutamate transporter inhibitor TBOA or Cd2+, which inhibits exocytosis. In order to elucidate the mechanisms contributing to taurine release, we studied its release properties in cultured astrocytes and cortical synaptosomes. Similarities between the results obtained in vivo and in synaptosomes suggest that the swelling-activated release of taurine in vivo may be of neuronal origin. Taken together, our findings indicate that different transport mechanisms and/or distinct cellular sources mediate hypoosmotic medium-induced release of the excitatory amino acids and taurine in vivo

    Long-lasting inhibition of presynaptic metabolism and neurotransmitter release by protein S-nitrosylation

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    Nitric oxide (NO) and related reactive nitrogen species (RNS) play a major role in the pathophysiology of stroke and other neurodegenerative diseases. One of the poorly understood consequences of stroke is a long-lasting inhibition of synaptic transmission. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that RNS can produce long-term inhibition of neurotransmitter release via S-nitrosylation of proteins in presynaptic nerve endings. We examined the effects of exogenous sources of RNS on the vesicular and non-vesicular L-[(3)H]glutamate release from rat brain synaptosomes. NO/RNS donors, such as spermine NONOate, MAHMA NONOate, S-nitroso-L-cysteine, and SIN-1, inhibited only the vesicular component of glutamate release with the order of potency that closely matched levels of protein S-nitrosylation. Inhibition of glutamate release persisted for >1 hr after RNS donor decomposition and wash out, and strongly correlated with decreases in the intrasynaptosomal ATP levels. Post-NO treatment of synaptosomes with thiol-reducing reagents decreased the total content of S-nitrosylated proteins but had little effect on glutamate release and ATP levels. In contrast, post-NO application of the end-product of glycolysis pyruvate partially rescued neurotransmitter release and ATP production. These data suggest that RNS suppress presynaptic metabolism and neurotransmitter release via poorly reversible modifications of glycolytic and mitochondrial enzymes, one of which was identified as glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. Similar mechanism may contribute to the long-term suppression of neuronal communication during nitrosative stress in vivo

    High compression deep learning based single-pixel hyperspectral macroscopic fluorescence lifetime imaging in vivo

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    Single pixel imaging frameworks facilitate the acquisition of high-dimensional optical data in biological applications with photon starved conditions. However, they are still limited to slow acquisition times and low pixel resolution. Herein, we propose a convolutional neural network for fluorescence lifetime imaging with compressed sensing at high compression (NetFLICS-CR), which enables in vivo applications at enhanced resolution, acquisition and processing speeds, without the need for experimental training datasets. NetFLICS-CR produces intensity and lifetime reconstructions at 128 × 128 pixel resolution over 16 spectral channels while using only up to 1% of the required measurements, therefore reducing acquisition times from ∼2.5 hours at 50% compression to ∼3 minutes at 99% compression. Its potential is demonstrated in silico, in vitro and for mice in vivo through the monitoring of receptor-ligand interactions in liver and bladder and further imaging of intracellular delivery of the clinical drug Trastuzumab to HER2-positive breast tumor xenografts. The data acquisition time and resolution improvement through NetFLICS-CR, facilitate the translation of single pixel macroscopic flurorescence lifetime imaging (SP-MFLI) for in vivo monitoring of lifetime properties and drug uptake.</jats:p

    Dependence of taurine and glutamate uptake on extracellular [Na<sup>+</sup>] in cultured astrocytes.

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    <p>Taurine and glutamate transport rates were measured in primary astrocyte cultures using [<sup>3</sup>H]taurine and d-[<sup>3</sup>H]aspartate. Extracellular concentrations of amino acids were adjusted to 10 µM using unlabeled taurine or l-glutamate. To compare glutamate versus taurine uptake, the values were normalized to uptake levels under basal conditions ([Na<sup>+</sup>]<sub>o</sub> = 135 mM). Note that under basal conditions absolute d-[<sup>3</sup>H]aspartate uptake rate (nmols/mg protein) was ∼5-fold higher compared to taurine. Data are the mean values ±SEM of three experiments from each group.</p

    Isoosmotic low [NaCl] medium does not induce taurine release from cultured rat astrocytes but modestly enhances taurine release from rat cortical synaptosomes.

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    <p>(a) Effect of hypoosmotic or isoosmotic reductions in [NaCl] on [<sup>3</sup>H]taurine release from astrocytes. The data represent mean values ±SEM of integral 10-min releases under isoosmotic (Basal), hypoosmotic (Hypo), or isoosmotic low [NaCl] solutions. n = 4 for each group. *p<0.05, ***p<0.001, vs. basal. (b) Integral 5-min releases of [<sup>3</sup>H]taurine from synaptosomes exposed to isoosmotic (Basal), hypoosmotic (Hypo) or isoosmotic media with lowered [NaCl]. Means ±SEM of 3 experiments. ** p<0.01, vs. basal.</p

    Effect of the glutamate transporter inhibitor dl-TBOA on hypoosmotic medium induced amino acid release in the cortex and glutamate transporter reversal in cultured astrocytes.

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    <p>(a–b) Microdialysis probes implanted on opposite sides of the cortex were perfused with hypoosmotic medium in the presence or absence of 500 µM dl-TBOA, given 20 minutes prior to and during one hour hypoosmotic medium perfusion. The data represent average dialysate levels of glutamate (a), aspartate (b) ±SEM from 4 rats. ** p<0.01 HYPO vs. HYPO+TBOA. (c) DL-TBOA effectively prevented reversal of glutamate transporter in cultured astrocytes. Cultured astrocytes were superfused for one hour with 1 mM ouabain and additionally for 20 min high [KCl] (100 mM) plus ouabain to induce glutamate transporter reversal. 300 µM dl-TBOA was given 10 minutes prior to and during the high [KCl] perfusion in the presence of ouabain. The data are the average values ±SEM for three experiments in each group. ** p<0.01 KCl vs. KCl+TBOA.</p
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