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Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) is a major stimulator of thyrotropin-stimulating hormone (TSH) synthesis in the anterior pituitary, though precisely how TRH stimulates the TSHβ gene remains unclear. Analysis of TRH-deficient mice differing in thyroid hormone status demonstrated that TRH was critical for the basal activity and responsiveness to thyroid hormone of the TSHβ gene. cDNA microarray and K-means cluster analyses with pituitaries from wild-type mice, TRH-deficient mice and TRH-deficient mice with thyroid hormone replacement revealed that the largest and most consistent decrease in expression in the absence of TRH and on supplementation with thyroid hormone was shown by the TSHβ gene, and the NR4A1 gene belonged to the same cluster as and showed a similar expression profile to the TSHβ gene. Immunohistochemical analysis demonstrated that NR4A1 was expressed not only in ACTH- and FSH- producing cells but also in thyrotrophs and the expression was remarkably reduced in TRH-deficient pituitary. Furthermore, experiments in vitro demonstrated that incubation with TRH in GH4C1 cells increased the endogenous NR4A1 mRNA level by approximately 50-fold within one hour, and this stimulation was inhibited by inhibitors for PKC and ERK1/2. Western blot analysis confirmed that TRH increased NR4A1 expression within 2 h. A series of deletions of the promoter demonstrated that the region between bp -138 and +37 of the TSHβ gene was responsible for the TRH-induced stimulation, and Chip analysis revealed that NR4A1 was recruited to this region. Conversely, knockdown of NR4A1 by siRNA led to a significant reduction in TRH-induced TSHβ promoter activity. Furthermore, TRH stimulated NR4A1 promoter activity through the TRH receptor. These findings demonstrated that 1) TRH is a highly specific regulator of the TSHβ gene, and 2) TRH mediated induction of the TSHβ gene, at least in part by sequential stimulation of the NR4A1-TSHβ genes through a PKC and ERK1/2 pathway.  相似文献   

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Interleukin-1 (IL-1 beta) increases the synthesis of both heavy and light (L)-ferritin subunits when added to human hepatoma cells (HepG2) grown in culture. RNase protection and Northern blot analysis with L-ferritin probes revealed that no changes in L-ferritin mRNA levels occur after cytokine stimulation. However, the induction coincides with an increased association of the L-subunit mRNA with polyribosomes. Since the recruitment of stored ferritin mRNA onto polyribosomes is seen when iron enters the cell, the effect of IL-1 beta on iron uptake was tested and was found to be unaffected by the lymphokine. Neither transferrin receptor mRNA levels nor the number of receptors displayed on the cell surface was affected by IL-1 beta. However, the action of the cytokine on ferritin translation is inhibited by the action of the intracellular iron chelator deferoxamine. These data indicate that IL-1 beta induces ferritin gene expression by translational control of its mRNA. The pathway of induction is different from iron-dependent ferritin gene expression whereas regulation requires the background presence of cellular iron.  相似文献   

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The effect of changes in iron availability and induction of differentiation on transferrin receptor expression and ferritin levels has been examined in the promonocytic cell line U937. Addition of iron (as 200 micrograms/ml saturated transferrin) or retinoic acid (1 microM) both caused approx. 70% reduction in the average number of surface transferrin receptors, while the iron chelator desferrioxamine caused an 84% increase. Comparable changes also occurred in the levels of transferrin receptor mRNA. Neither iron nor retinoic acid significantly altered the half-life of transferrin receptor mRNA in the presence of actinomycin D (approx. 75 min) but a 10-fold increase in stability occurred in the presence of desferrioxamine. Iron and retinoic acid both caused an increase in intracellular ferritin levels (approx. 4-and 3-fold, respectively), while desferrioxamine reduced ferritin levels by approx. two-thirds. The effect of iron and retinoic acid added together did not differ greatly from that of each agent alone. None of the treatments greatly affected levels of L-ferritin mRNA. Virtually no H-ferritin mRNA was detected in U937 cells. These results show that changes in ferritin and transferrin receptor caused by treatment with retinoic acid are similar to those induced by excess iron, and suggest that changes in these proteins during cell differentiation are due to redistribution of intracellular iron into the regulatory pool(s), rather than to iron-independent mechanisms.  相似文献   

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A rat thyroid peroxidase cDNA has been isolated from a FRTL-5 thyroid cell library and sequenced. The cDNA is 2776 base pairs long with an open reading frame of 770 amino acids. By comparison to full-length human thyroid peroxidase cDNA and based on its identification of a 3.2 kilobase mRNA in rat thyroid FRTL-5 cell Northern blots, the rat peroxidase cDNA appears to lack 400-500 base pairs at the 5'-end of the mRNA. It exhibits only a 74% nucleotide and 77% amino acid sequence similarity to human thyroid peroxidase cDNA within the total aligned sequences, although the predicted active site regions are highly conserved (greater than 90-100%). The cDNA has been used to map the thyroid peroxidase gene in mice to chromosome 12 and to compare thyroid peroxidase and thyroglobulin gene expression in FRTL-5 rat thyroid cells. Despite the fact TSH action in both cases is duplicated, and presumably mediated, by cAMP, TSH-induced increases in thyroid peroxidase and thyroglobulin mRNA levels differ. Differences exist with respect to hormone concentration and time. The ability of TSH to increase thyroglobulin, but not thyroid peroxidase mRNA levels, requires insulin, 5% serum, or insulin-like growth factor-I. Insulin or insulin-like growth factor-I alone can increase thyroglobulin mRNA levels as well as or better than TSH but have only a small effect on thyroid peroxidase mRNA levels by comparison to TSH. The ability of TSH to increase thyroglobulin gene expression is readily detected in nuclear run-on assays but not the ability of TSH to increase thyroid peroxidase gene expression. Cycloheximide inhibits TSH-increased thyroglobulin but not peroxidase mRNA levels. Finally, methimazole and phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate show different effects on TSH-induced increases in thyroglobulin and thyroid peroxidase mRNA levels.  相似文献   

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Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) alpha is a cytokine capable of inducing caspase-dependent (apoptotic) cell death in some cells and caspase-independent (necrosis-like) cell death in others. Here, using a mutagenesis screen for genes critical in TNF-induced death in L929 cells, we have found that H-ferritin deficiency is responsible for TNF resistance in a mutant line and that, upon treatment with TNF, this line fails to elevate levels of labile iron pool (LIP), critical for TNF-induced reactive oxygen species (ROS) production and ROS-dependent cell death. Since we found that TNF-induced LIP in L929 cells is primarily furnished by intracellular storage iron, the lesser induction of LIP in H-ferritin-deficient cells results from a reduction of intracellular iron storage caused by less H-ferritin. Different from some other cell lines, the H-ferritin gene in L929 cells is not TNF inducible; however, when H-ferritin is expressed in L929 cells under a TNF-inducible system, the TNF-induced LIP and subsequent ROS production and cell death were all prevented. Thus, LIP is a common denominator of ferritin both in the enhancement of cell death by basal steady-state H-ferritin and in protection against cell death by induced H-ferritin, thereby acting as a key determinant of TNF-induced cell death.  相似文献   

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Mitochondrial ferritin (MtF) is a newly identified ferritin encoded by an intronless gene on chromosome 5q23.1. The mature recombinant MtF has a ferroxidase center and binds iron in vitro similarly to H-ferritin. To explore the structural and functional aspects of MtF, we expressed the following forms in HeLa cells: the MtF precursor (approximately 28 kDa), a mutant MtF precursor with a mutated ferroxidase center, a truncated MtF lacking the approximately 6-kDa mitochondrial leader sequence, and a chimeric H-ferritin with this leader sequence. The experiments show that all constructs with the leader sequence were processed into approximately 22-kDa subunits that assembled into multimeric shells electrophoretically distinct from the cytosolic ferritins. Mature MtF was found in the matrix of mitochondria, where it is a homopolymer. The wild type MtF and the mitochondrially targeted H-ferritin both incorporated the (55)Fe label in vivo. The mutant MtF with an inactivated ferroxidase center did not take up iron, nor did the truncated MtF expressed transiently in cytoplasm. Increased levels of MtF both in transient and in stable transfectants resulted in a greater retention of iron as MtF in mitochondria, a decrease in the levels of cytosolic ferritins, and up-regulation of transferrin receptor. Neither effect occurred with the mutant MtF with the inactivated ferroxidase center. Our results indicate that exogenous iron is as available to mitochondrial ferritin as it is to cytosolic ferritins and that the level of MtF expression may have profound consequences for cellular iron homeostasis.  相似文献   

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Transfectant HeLa cells were generated that expressed human ferritin H-chain wild type and an H-chain mutant with inactivated ferroxidase activity under the control of the tetracycline-responsive promoter (Tet-off). The clones accumulated exogenous ferritins up to levels 14-16-fold over background, half of which were as H-chain homopolymers. This had no evident effect in the mutant ferritin clone, whereas it induced an iron-deficient phenotype in the H-ferritin wild type clone, manifested by approximately 5-fold increase of IRPs activity, approximately 2.5-fold increase of transferrin receptor, approximately 1.8-fold increase in iron-transferrin iron uptake, and approximately 50% reduction of labile iron pool. Overexpression of the H-ferritin, but not of the mutant ferritin, strongly reduced cell growth and increased resistance to H(2)O(2) toxicity, effects that were reverted by prolonged incubation in iron-supplemented medium. The results show that in HeLa cells H-ferritin regulates the metabolic iron pool with a mechanism dependent on the functionality of the ferroxidase centers, and this affects, in opposite directions, cellular growth and resistance to oxidative damage. This, and the finding that also in vivo H-chain homopolymers are much less efficient than the H/L heteropolymers in taking up iron, indicate that functional activity of H-ferritin in HeLa cells is that predicted from the in vitro data.  相似文献   

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Enhanced expression of the human ferritin H- and L-chain genes (hfH and hfL) was achieved in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by modifying the N-terminal region of the structural genes. The yeast episomal vector YEp352 with the galactokinase1 (GAL1) promoter was used to construct expression plasmids. The expression of each gene was examined using SDS-PAGE and Western blot analysis. Iron uptake was examined and the cellular iron concentration was increased in S. cerevisiae expressing hfH. When cultured cells were incubated with 14.3 mM Fe(2+), the recombinant yeast expressing hfH had a cellular iron concentration 1.5 times greater than that of the control strain. The relationship between the iron taken up by the cells and the expressed proteins was examined. Iron-binding H-chain ferritin (H-ferritin) was seen in the recombinant S. cerevisiae incubated with iron, while small amounts of iron-binding L-chain ferritin (L-ferritin) were observed. Combined, these observations demonstrate that human H-ferritin has a function in iron storage in S. cerevisiae, while L-ferritin does not.  相似文献   

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Traditionally, transferrin has been considered the primary mechanism for cellular iron delivery, despite suggestive evidence for additional iron delivery mechanisms. In this study we examined ferritin, considered an iron storage protein, as a possible delivery protein. Ferritin consists of H- and L-subunits, and we demonstrated iron uptake by ferritin into multiple organs and that the uptake of iron is greater when the iron is delivered via H-ferritin compared with L-ferritin. The delivery of iron via H-ferritin but not L-ferritin was significantly decreased in mice with compromised iron storage compared with control, indicating that a feedback mechanism exists for H-ferritin iron delivery. To further evaluate the mechanism of ferritin iron delivery into the brain, we used a cell culture model of the blood-brain barrier to demonstrate that ferritin is transported across endothelial cells. There are receptors that prefer H-ferritin on the endothelial cells in culture and on rat brain microvasculature. These studies identify H-ferritin as an iron transport protein and suggest the presence of an H-ferritin receptor for mediating iron delivery. The relative amount of iron that could be delivered via H-ferritin could make this protein a predominant player in cellular iron delivery. blood-brain barrier; iron transport; H-ferritin  相似文献   

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