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1.
DNA fiber autoradiography was used to analyze the spatial and temporal organization of activated initiation sites for DNA replication in mouse L929 cells infected with reovirus type 3 (Dearing strain) and in uninfected control cells. Cells were labeled for 10 min with3H-thymidine at high specific activity followed by 3 h of low specific activity labeling. Reovirus infection causes no change in the rate of replication fork progression, but increases both the mean distance between activated initiation sites by 30% and the nonrandomness in the spatial distribution of the sites along the DNA fibers. Significant synchronization of initiation in adjacent activated sites was detected on DNA fibers from uninfected cells and from reovirusinfected cells. The mean relative initiation time for pairs of initiation events which had occurred prior to high specific activity labeling did not differ significantly between the infected and uninfected cells. The data are consistent with the interpretation that reovirus infection shuts off initiation sites in a coordinated fashion, possibly by preventing activation of entire clusters of potential initiation sites.  相似文献   

2.
The rate of fork movement during DNA replication in mammalian cells   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Yu. B. Yurov 《Chromosoma》1979,74(3):347-353
DNA fiber autoradiography was used to measure the rate of replication fork progression along replication units in human diploid cells. The rate in different replication units differs very significantly and lies within the range 0.1 to 1.2 m/min. However, no significant changes were found in the rate of fork movement along single replication units operating during long intervals of S phase. Moreover, the fork progression rate is constant in many replication units of human cells.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Fragments and suspensions of human fetal thymus were incubated in the presence of 3H-TdR to permit study of the distribution and morphology of DNA-synthesizing cells. Results of light and EM autoradiography showed that 1. although DNA-synthesizing cells were present in the medulla, the vast majority of these cells were localized in the thymic cortex, 2. cells with the typical EM appearance of small lymphocytes and lymphoid blast cells both synthesized DNA, and 3. cells in S-phase were predominantly 8 to 12 m in size.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Immunoreaction of -fetoprotein (AFP) was detected not only in well-differentiated hepatocellular carcinoma but also in hepatocytes forming foci in livers with hyperplastic nodules during 3-methyl-4-dimethylaminoazobenzene hepatocarcinogenesis. The subcellular location of AFP in hepatoma cells was in the rough endoplasmic reticulum, perinuclear space and well-developed Golgi apparatus around the nucleus. In livers with hyperplastic nodules it was also in some parts of the smooth endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi regions in hepatocytes in the vicinity of submembranous areas or bile canaliculi. These findings suggest that the Golgi apparatus in hepatoma cells acts mainly as an organelle for glycosylation of AFP and that the Golgi complexes in the hepatocytes in livers with hyperplastic nodules are organelles for secretion of AFP.Combined light microscopic immunoperoxidase study and autoradiography with 3H-thymidine revealed a higher cumulative labeling index in AFP-positive hepatoma cells than in non-tumorous areas. Combined electron microscopic immunoperoxidase study and autoradiography showed that hepatoma cells with AFP immunoreactivity only in the rough endoplasmic reticulum had a significantly higher labeling index than did cells with AFP immunoreactivity in both rough endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus. These findings suggest that AFP is synthesized in hepatoma cells before or during the stage of their DNA synthesis and is then transported to the Golgi apparatus.  相似文献   

5.
Summary Target cells for testosterone, dihydrotestosterone, and estradiol in the pituitary gland and genital tract of the male primate were localized by thaw-mount autoradiography, and high performance liquid chromatography was used to identify the metabolites of these steroids in cell nuclei. Castrated rhesus monkeys were injected with 3H-testosterone, 3H-dihydrotestosterone, or 3H-estradiol and killed 60 min later. In the anterior pituitary gland, fewer cells were labeled and less radioactivity was taken up by cell nuclei following the administration of either 3H-testosterone (4% of pars distalis cells and 5 dpm/g DNA) or 3H-dihydrotestosterone (5% of cells and 13 dpm/g DNA) than following the administration of 3H-estradiol (43% of cells and 214 dpm/g DNA). Most of the radioactivity in nuclei was in the form of the unmetabolized parent compound (78–94%). In prostate, seminal vesicles, and penis, 3H-dihydrotestosterone was the predominant form of nuclear radioactivity following both 3H-testosterone (67–90%) and 3H-dihydrostestosterone (94–97%) administration, and both androgens labeled epithelial and smooth muscle cells. In contrast, 3H-estradiol was taken up in unchanged form, by cell nuclei of the genital tract and it labeled connective tissue fibroblasts, but not epithelial cells. Thus, the distributions of target cells for androgens and estrogens were clearly different in all these tissues, and the uptake of testosterone resembled that of its androgenic rather than that of its estrogenic metabolite.  相似文献   

6.
We have studied the timing of preprophase band (PPB) development in the division cycle of onion (Allium cepa L.) root-tip cells by combinations of immunofluorescence microscopy of microtubules, microspectrophotometry of nuclear DNA, and autoradiography of [3H]thymidine incorporation during pulse-chase experiments. In normally grown onion root tips, every cell with a PPB had the G2 level of nuclear DNA. Some were in interphase, prior to chromatin condensation, and some had varying degrees of chromatin condensation, up to the stage of prophase at which the PPB-prophase spindle transition occurs. In addition, autoradiography showed that PPBs can be formed in cells which have just finished their S phase, and microspectrophotometry enabled us to detect a population of cells in G2 which had no PPBs, these presumably including cells which had left the division cycle. The effects of inhibitors of DNA synthesis showed that the formation of PPBs is not fully coupled to events of the nuclear cycle. Although the mitotic index decreased 6-10-fold to less than 0.5% when roots were kept in 20 g·ml-1 aphidicolin for more than 8 h, the percentage of cells containing PPBs did not decrease in proportion: the number of cells in interphase with PPBs increased while the number in prophase decreased. Almost the same phenomena were observed in the presence of 100 g·ml-1 5-aminouracil and 40 g·ml-1 hydroxyurea. In controls, all cells with PPBs were in G2 or prophase, but in the presence of aphidicolin, 5-aminouracil or hydroxyurea, some of the interphase cells with PPBs were in the S phase or even in the G1 phase. We conclude that PPB formation normally occurs in G2 (in at least some cases very early in G2) and that this timing can be experimentally uncoupled from the timing of DNA duplication in the cell-division cycle. The result accords with other evidence indicating that the cytoplasmic events of cytokinesis are controlled in parallel to the nuclear cycle, rather than in an obligatorily coupled sequence.Abbreviations APC aphidicolin - 5-AU 5-aminouracil - DAPI 4, 6-diamidino-2phenylindole - HU hydroxyurea - MI mitotic index - MT microtubule - PMSF phenylmethyl-sulfonyl fluoride - PPB preprophase band - %PPB percentage of cells with PPBs  相似文献   

7.
Summary A single dose of the DNA-binding cytostatic agent bleomycin (100 g/g body weight, subcutaneously) was given to 10-day-old rats to study unscheduled repair DNA synthesis in nucleolar and in bulk nuclear chromatin of postmitotic Purkinje neurons. The Feulgen reaction and Hoechst 33342 staining were used for quantitative evaluation of nuclear DNA content and chromatin structure. The repair synthesis of DNA was detected by 3H-thymidine autoradiography.The data showed a lesser staining of Purkinje as well as granule cell DNA by Hoechst 33342 in bleomycin-treated animals than in controls, but there was no difference in staining with the Feulgen reation. The mechanisms of DNA staining by both cytochemical methods suggest that bleomycin reacted preferentially with AT-rich and single stranded DNA in cerebellar cells in vivo. Weak 3H-thymidine labelling was found in Purkinje cells of both control and treated rats, but in the latter group the labelling was more pronounced near or over the nucleolus. The enhanced unscheduled DNA synthesis in the nucleolar region of Purkinje cells of treated animals may be due to greater damage of DNA in this region or may indicate a greater ability of the nucleolar chromatin to repair its DNA.Dedicated to Professor Dr. Z. Lojda, Dr. Sc., on the occasion of his 60th birthday.  相似文献   

8.
Summary The proliferative activity of newborn and adult mouse adrenal medullary cells was determined with light and electron microscopic autoradiography. The H3 thymidine labelling index of 2 weeks old mice adrenal medullary cells was about 9.4 % and declined to less than 1 % in adult mice. In electron microscopic autoradiography labelled norepinephrine as well as epinephrine cells could be seen. Only in 1 and 2 weeks old mice some morphologically undifferentiated cells were visible. In formaldehyde induced fluorescence combined with light microscopic autoradiography the fluorescence intensities of labelled and unlabelled medullary cells were measured. On average the fluorescence intensity of labelled cells was lower than that of unlabelled cells. The differences could be explained by a higher number of autoradiographic silver grains laying on the cytoplasm of labelled cells. These results give evidence that fully differentiated adrenal medullary cells are capable of division.This study was supported by Jubiläumsfonds der Österreichischen Nationalbank grant No. 818  相似文献   

9.
DNA fiber autoradiography and alkaline sucrose sedimentation of DNA of cultured pea-root cells (Pisum sativum) arrested in G2 by carbohydrate starvation demonstrated that nascent DNA molecules of replicon (16–27 × 106 D) and apparent cluster (~330 × 106 D) size were not joined. That the arrested cells were in G2 was confirmed by single-cell autoradiography and cytophotometry. In pea there are about 18 replicons per average cluster, 4.2 × 103 clusters, and 7.7 × 104 replicons per genome.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Amounts of radio-labelled substances as low as 10–18 moles incorporated into individual cells can be measured by utilizing techniques of quantitative autoradiography. For this purpose, radioactive standard sources are processed with the labelled cells smeared to slides. Carbon-14 is a favourable isotope with regard to minimal loss of -disintegrations due to self-absorption, and to limited cross-fire effects complicating the attribution of silver grains to individual cells. Silver grain densities can be counted by automated microphotometry allowing on-line data processing by an interfaced computer.Rate measurements of14C-thymidine incorporation into individual cells yield values of the DNA synthesis rate provided that the endogenous pathway of thymidine-phosphate formation has been previously blocked. From the rate values of individual cells the DNA synthesis time of a cell compartment is derived. This is an essential time parameter for the evaluation of kinetic events in proliferating cell populations. This method is applicable to human cells without radiation hazard to man, and provides an optimal source of detailed information on the kinetics of normal and diseased human haematopoiesis. Examples of application consist of thalassaemia, malaria infection, iron deficiency anaemia and acute myelogenous leukaemia.  相似文献   

11.
Replication rate and replicon sizes in chromosomal DNA of in vitro cultured diploid D. melanogaster cells were determined using autoradiography of 3H-thymidine labeled DNA. Synthesis of DNA in euchromatic and heterochromatic regions of Drosophila diploid cells occurs at different periods of the S phase which lasts 10 h. During the first 4 h the synthesis is observed only in euchromatic regions. The heterochromatic synthesis starts shortly before the synthesis in euchromatic regions is completed and lasts for 6 h until the end of the S phase. The cells were synchronized by 5fluorodeoxyuridine which blocked the diploid cell DNA synthesis. Synthesis was found to start simultaneously in most euchromatic replicons. In the majority of the replicons the synthesis started at a single point and proceeded bidirectionally. The average rate of DNA synthesis per fork was 12.5 m/h (38 kb). The mean distance between the middle points of adjacent labeled regions was 70 m (210 kb). The size of most replicons ranged from 40 to 120 m. — These estimates do not apply to the heterochromatic portions of the D. melanogaster genome since the measurements have been carried out on DNA preparations obtained during the first 2 h of the S phase. — On the average, a replicon can consist of 7 chromomeres since the size of a replicon in diploid cell chromosomal DNA and DNA length of a polytene chromomere average 210 and 30 kb, respectively.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Nuclei of various cell types in the eye of embryonal and adult Guinea pigs were studied by means of electron microscopy, cytophotometry and autoradiography. Striking differences in condensation and arrangement of chromatin were found between the different tissues and cells. Several nuclear types were analyzed quantitatively with regard to their content of condensed and decondensed chromatin by means of electron microscopic morphometry. Structural differences in chromatin organization coincided with different nuclear DNA contents in various cell types of the retina, such as bipolar cells, Müller cells, rods and cones, and the pigmented epithelium.The differences between DNA-Feulgen means obtained by cytophotometric analysis were highly significant. Template activity as shown by3H-uridine incorporation made evident that the rate of RNA synthesis is positively correlated with the quantity of decondensed chromatin. It is speculated that differentiation of the Guinea pig eye involves differential DNA synthesis, and that the extra-DNA could have some trigger function for the pattern of chromatin condensation and thus the pattern of gene expression.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The UV-sensitivity of phage and its infectious DNA have been compared in experiments involving infection of normal cells by phage and transfection of lysozyme-EDTA spheroplasts or Ca++-treated cells by phage DNA. It is shown that UV-irradiated DNA undergoes extensive HCR. Since intact phage and free phage DNA have the same survival after UV-irradiation in Hcr- spheroplasts and cells, resp., and since survival is also identical in Ca++-treated Hcr+ cells it is concluded that DNA in solution or packaged in the phage head provides the same target for the induction of lethal UV lesions. This conclusion is supported by the observation that cysteamine provides a similar radioprotection to the intact phage and its free DNA. Spheroplasts of Hcr+ cells, however, have an HCR capacity reduced by about 20% when compared with normal or Ca++-treated cells. Moreover, UV-reactivation of irradiated DNA, which is absent in spheroplasts, occurs efficiently in Ca++-treated cells. Possible reasons for the physiological difference between spheroplasts and normal cells are discussed. c-mutations, which are readily induced by UV in phage assayed with E. coli mul -, could not be induced in DNA when assayed with spheroplasts or Ca++-treated cells of this strain. No mutants were also found with DNA extracted from UV-irradiated phage. The significance of the mode of entry of UV-irradiated DNA into a cell for the production of mutations is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Summary The rate of synthesis of total cellular proteins has been studied by pulse labelling cells at various periods after irradiation with UV or -rays, after treatment with mitomycin C (MMC) or after expression of the temperature sensitive mutation tif. Subsequent gel electrophoresis and autoradiography reveals changes in the rate of synthesis of several proteins. The most striking change is in a protein of molecular weight 40,000, protein X, which has been previously most extensively studied in cells treated with nalidixic acid (Gudas, 1976). Synthesis of large quantities of protein X is induced by UV, -rays, MMC treatment or tif expression in rec + but not recA cells. A feature of recA cells is that they break down their DNA excessively after irradiation or MMC treatment. However, if protein synthesis following irradiation is prohibited by chloramphenicol, post-irradiation degradation becomes excessive in recA + cells. This inverse relationship between DNA degradation and new protein synthesis is consistent with the hypothesis that an induced protein such as X is responsible for controlling DNA degradation following irradiation. Protein X is not induced in a lexB mutant following MMC treatment. In this respect the lexB mutant behaves like lexA and recA mutants in that the ability to induce protein X can be correlated with excessive DNA degradation.Studies on the induction of proteins in inf, tif and tif sfi mutants fail to reveal any correlation between induction of protein X and either the induction of prophage or septation.  相似文献   

15.
The replication of chromosomal DNA in human and Chinese hamster cell populations has been studied by means of the DNA fiber autoradiography. It was found that the rate of DNA replication for one fork in human cells varies from 0.2 to 0.9 m/min, the average being 0.6 m/min. In the Chinese hamster cells the rate of DNA replication is greater, varying from 0.3 to 1.2 m/min, the average being 0.8 m/min. There are no clusters containing a great number of replication units in human and Chinese hamster cells. Sequences consisting of two or three replicons which belong to single DNA molecule have been observed, but their frequency was relatively low. The distances between the initiation points in such sequences of replicons vary from 40 to 280 m, the average value being 130 m. This value represents the minimum size of the replication units which have completed the DNA synthesis within 3 h of the S-period. The DNA synthesis in most replication units fails to be accomplished within the three hours of labelling. The process can be completed only in the fragments of DNA molecules of 40 to 200 m (the average value being 100 m) in human cells, whereas in the Chinese hamster cells the fragments of 40 to 250 m (the average being about 140 m) are completely replicated. Provided that the replication is bidirectional the complete replicons are supposed to contain two such fragments. Consequently, the greater part of replication units in mammalian cells covers the pieces of a few hundred microns in DNA molecules. The relation between replication process at the DNA molecules level and that at the metaphase chromosome level is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Summary Previous studies from our laboratory indicate that the adaptive response of the exocrine pancreas of the rat to prolonged stimulation with optimal doses of caerulein (0.25 g × kg-1 × h-1) follows a characteristic time course in which each step in the secretory pathway is activated. The immediate response is the depletion of zymogen-granule stores followed by coordinate and anticoordinate changes in individual rates of (pro-)enzyme synthesis after a lag period of 2 h. The sum of such changes leads to an increase in total rate of protein synthesis by 3 h which is combined with acceleration of intracellular transport packaging and granule discharge. In the present study the time course of DNA synthesis and the labeling index of five populations of pancreatic cells have been analyzed after caerulein stimulation for periods ranging from 6 to 72 h, using in vivo labeling with 1 Ci/g 3H-thymidine 1 h prior to sacrifice of the animals. DNA synthesis did not change during the initial 18 h in spite of persistent stimulation indicated by a 80% reduction of enzyme content. Following this lag period a sharp rise in DNA synthesis 20- to 25-fold above control levels was observed, which decreased by 48 h to reach control levels by 72 h. Increase in DNA synthesis was most pronounced in animals with lowest enzyme content in the pancreas. From the five cell populations studied by autoradiography interlobular duct cells and islet cells had no significant increase in labeling index at any time of stimulation. Acinar cells, intralobular duct cells and interstitial cells showed a marked increase in labeling index after a latent period of 18 h with peak values at 36 h 30 to 50 times higher in intralobular duct and acinar cells, respectively, and 4 times higher in interstitial cells. The increased labeling indices in all three cell populations reverted to lower values at 48 h and reached control values by 72 h. The data indicate a phasic and limited growth response of the rat exocrine pancreas to persistent stimulation with acinar cells as the major contributing cell population.Supported by a grant from Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (SFB215-C 3)  相似文献   

17.
Summary Immunohistochemical detection of the thymidine analogue 5-bromo-2-deoxyuridine (BrdUrd), which is incorporated by S-phase cells, offers a convenient way of studying the proliferation kinetics of cells in normal skeletal tissues and in bone containing/derived tumours. To assess the validity of using this approach on decalcified, paraffin embedded tissues, the BrdUrd method was compared with tritiated thymidine (3H-TdR) autoradiography, using rat tibiae labelled with both3H-TdR and BrdUrd, fixed in Carnoy's fluid and decalcified in EDTA, prior to routine paraffin embedding. The distribution of BrdUrd-labelled cells correlated with the sites of cell proliferation in the growing rat tibia.Independent studies with each method on paired serial sections of double-labelled tissue, showed a highly significant correlation (r=0.81, p<0.0003) in the numbers of labelled cells seen in autoradiographs and immunostained sections from the proximal tibial growth plate. Combined BrdUrd immunohistochemistry and3H-TdR autoradiography showed that the majority of labelled cells in cartilage, bone marrow, and fibrous perichondrium and periosteum had incorporated both labels. These results show that BrdUrd immunohistochemistry is a valid technique for the study of dividing cells in mineralized tissues after decalcification.  相似文献   

18.
Lens development and differentiation are intricate and complex processes characterized by distinct molecular and morphological changes. The growth of a transparent lens involves proliferation of the epithelial cells and their subsequent differentiation into secondary fiber cells. Prior to differentiation, epithelial cells at the lens equator exit from the cell cycle and elongate into long, ribbon-like cells. Fiber cell elongation takes place bidirectionally as fiber tips migrate both anteriorly and posteriorly along the apical surface of the epithelium and inner surface of the capsule, respectively. The differentiating fiber cells move inward from the periphery to the center of the lens on a continuous basis as the lens grows throughout life. Finally, when fiber cells reach the center or suture line, their basal and apical tips detach from the epithelium and capsule, respectively, and interlock with cells from the opposite direction of the lens and form the suture line. Further, symmetric packing of fiber cells and degradation of most of the cellular organelle during fiber cell terminal differentiation are crucial for lens transparency. These sequential events are presumed to depend on cytoskeletal dynamics and cell adhesive interactions; however, our knowledge of regulation of lens fiber cell cytosketal reorganization, cell adhesive interactions and mechanotransduction, and their role in lens morphogenesis and function is limited at present. Recent biochemical and molecular studies have targeted cytoskeletal signaling proteins, including Rho GTPases, Abl kinase interacting proteins, cell adhesion molecules, myosin II, Src kinase and phosphoinositide 3-kinase in the developing chicken and mouse lens and characterized components of the fiber cell basal membrane complex. These studies have begun to unravel the vital role of cytoskeletal proteins and their regulatory pathways in control of lens morphogenesis, fiber cell elongation, migration, differentiation, survival and mechanical properties.Key words: lens, fiber cells, elongation, migration, adhesion, Rho GTPasesLens morphogenesis involves a complex network of regulatory genes and interplay between growth factor, mitogenic, cell adhesive and cytoskeletal signaling pathways. The lens originates from surface ectoderm near the optic vesicle and lens vesicle that is formed via invagination of lens placode differentiates into primary fibers (the posterior half ) and epithelial cells (the anterior half ). These changes in embryonic cells control the lens distinctive anterior-posterior polarity. Subsequently, the lens grows through the proliferation of epithelial cells and the differentiation of their progeny into secondary fiber cells.1,2 The continuous addition of new fiber cells at the lens periphery leads to a gradual inward movement of older cells to the center of the lens. The ectodermal basement membrane that surrounds the lens vesicle thickens to form the lens capsule and is composed of mainly proteins of extracellular matrix.2,3 Since the lens does not shed cells, they are retained throughout the lens''s life and are packed symmetrically within the lens4 (Fig. 1).Open in a separate windowFigure 1Diagram of organization of lens epithelial and differentiating fiber cells. The lens is enclosed by a thick capsule consisting of various extracellular matrix proteins. Lens epithelial cells at the equator divide and exit from the cell cycle, and as they exit from the cell cycle, they start to elongate bidirectionally by making apical (AMC) and basal (BMC) membrane complexes with epithelium and capsule, respectively. As fiber cells elongate, they are pushed down and migrate toward the center. As the fiber cells migrate toward the center, both the basal and apical membrane complexes are expected to undergo changes in a regulated manner to control fiber cell adhesive, protrusive and contractile activity. Finally, when the fiber cells reach the center or suture line, their basal and apical ends detach from the epithelium and capsule, respectively and interlock with cells from the opposite direction of the lens and form suture. During fiber cell elongation and differentiation, cell adhesive interactions are reorganized extensively, and terminally differentiated fiber cells exhibit loss of cellular organelle and extensive membrane remodeling with unique ball and socket interdigitations. Arrows indicate the direction of fiber cell movement. This schematic is a modified version of Figure 2 from Lovicu and McAvoy.1Lens fiber cell elongation and differentiation is associated with a remarkable change in cell morphology, with the length of fiber cells increasing on the order of several hundredfold. These morphological changes are associated with extensive membrane and cortical cytoskeletal remodeling, actomyosin reorganization and cell adhesion turnover.517 Additionally, the tips of the elongating fiber cells at both the anterior and posterior terminals slide along the lens epithelium and capsule, respectively, as these cells migrate inward, and finally detach at the suture, where they form contacts with their counterparts from the opposite side of the lens.4,12 These cell movements are fundamental for maintaining distinct lens fiber cell polarity and are temporally and spatially regulated as the lens grows continuously throughout life.1,2,12 Another unique feature of the lens is that during fiber cell terminal differentiation, all the cellular organelles, including nuclei, endoplasmic reticulum and mitochondria, are degraded in a programmed manner.18 It has been well documented that lens epithelial cell elongation and differentiation is associated with reorganization of actin cytoskeleton, increased ratio of G-actin to F-actin, integrin switching, formation of N-cadherin linked cell adhesions, and expression of actin capping protein tropomodulin.5,6,9,10,13,15,17,1921 Importantly, disruption of actin cytoskeletal organization has been shown to impair lens epithelial differentiation and induce cataract formation, indicating the significance of actin cytoskeleton in lens differentiation and maintenance of lens optical quality.14,22 Further, during accommodation, lens shape is changed in a reversible manner. Therefore, the tensional homeostasis between actomyosin inside the fiber cell and fiber cell adhesion on the inner side of the lens capsule is considered to be crucial for accommodation.12In the developing mouse and chicken lens, the tips of the fiber cells (both apical and basal) have been reported to cluster with different cytoskeletal proteins, including actin, myosin II, actin capping protein tropomodulin, and N-cadherins.10,19,21 Similarly, adhesion regulating signaling molecules including integrins, focal adhesion kinase, Cdk5, abl kinase interacting protein (Abi-2), and Rho GTPases have been shown to localize to the fiber cell apical and basal tips.20,2326 Moreover, isolation and characterization of the fiber cell basal membrane complexes (BMCs) had revealed a symmetric organization of N-cadherin, myosin II, actin in association with myosin light chain kinase, focal adhesion kinase, β1 integrin and caldesmon.12 The signaling activity, tensional property and dynamics of BMCs are thought to control the coordinated migration of fiber cells along the lens capsule, formation of lens suture line, and lens accommodation.12 Additionally, the BMCs have been shown to undergo a characteristic regional rearrangement (including size and shape) during lens elongation and migration along the lens capsule.27 Therefore, impaired fiber cell migration on the lens capsule is expected to induce cataractogenesis.27 Taken together, these different observations convincingly indicate the importance of cytoskeleton and cell adhesion regulatory mechanisms in lens fiber cell elongation and migration.Although important insights have emerged regarding external cues controlling lens epithelial cell proliferation, elongation and differentiation, little is known regarding the specific signaling pathways that drive the processes culminating in fiber cell formation, migration, packing and maturation.1,7,28 For example, growth factors are known to play key roles in influencing cell fates during development. Some of the major growth factor families, including FGFs and TGFβ/BMPs, have been shown to be involved in the regulation of lens developmental processes and primary fiber cell differentiation via ERK kinase activation.1,28,29 However, the identity and role of signaling pathways acting downstream to growth factors regulating lens secondary fiber cell elongation, migration, adhesion, membrane remodeling and survival are poorly understood.1,12,21,30 In particular, regulatory mechanisms involved in cytoskeletal reorganization, tensional force and cell adhesive interactions during these cellular processes have yet be identified and characterized.7,9,12,21,3032Our laboratory has been working on a broad hypothesis that the actin cytoskeletal and cell adhesive signaling mechanisms composed of Rho GTPases (Rho, Rac and Cdc42) and their effector molecules play a critical role in controlling lens growth and differentiation, and in maintaining lens integrity.7 The Rho family of small GTPases regulates morphogenesis, polarity, migration and cell adhesion.33 These proteins bind GTP, exhibit GTPase activity, and cycle between an inactive GDP-bound form and an active GTP-bound form. This cycling is regulated by three groups of proteins: guanine-nucleotide exchange factors, which facilitate the exchange of GDP for GTP, thus rendering Rho GTPases active; GTPase-activating proteins, which regulate the inactivation of Rho by accelerating intrinsic GTPase activity and converting Rho GTPases back to their GDP-bound form; and GDP dissociation inhibitors (GDIs), which inhibit the dissociation of GDP bound to Rho GTPases.33,34 The GTP-bound form of the Rho GTPases interact with downstream effectors, which include protein kinases (e.g., ROCK and PAK), regulators of actin polymerization (e.g., N-WASP/WAVE, PI3-kinase and mDia), and other proteins with adaptor functions.33 The selective interaction of the different Rho GTPases with a variety of effectors determines the final outcome of their activation.33 For example, during cell movement, Rac and Cdc42 stimulate formation of protrusions at the leading edges of cells, and RhoA induces retraction at the tail ends of cells. This coordinated cytoskeletal reorganization permits cells to move toward a target.35 PI3-kinase and PI (3, 4, 5) P3 have also been widely implicated in controlling cell migration and polarity in a Rac GTPase-dependent manner.35 Members of the Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein (WASP) and WASP-family verprolin homologous protein (WAVE) families serve to link Rho GTPases signals to the ARP2/3 complex, leading to actin polymerization that is crucial for the reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton at the leading edge for processes such as cell movement and protrusions.36 Importantly, all three Rho GTPases also regulate microtubule polymerization and assembly of adherens junctions to influence polarity and cell adhesion, respectively.33,37Likewise, a tensional balance between cell adhesion on the outside and myosin II-based contractility on the inside of the cells is regulated by Rho GTPases.38To explore the role of the Rho GTPases in lens morphogenesis and differentiation, we have targeted the lens Rho GTPases by overexpressing either the C3 exoenzyme (inactivator of RhoA and RhoB) or RhoGDIα (Rho GDP dissociation inhibitor) in a lens-specific manner in transgenic mice and followed their effects developmentally. These two transgenic mouse models exhibited ocular phenotype, including lens opacity (cataract) and microphthalmic eyes. Importantly, various histological, immunofluorescence and biochemical analyses performed in these developing transgenic mice have revealed defective lens morphogenesis, abnormal fiber cell migration, elongation, disrupted cytoskeletal organization and adhesive interactions, along with changes in proteins of the fiber cell gap junctions and water channels.32,39 These lenses have also shown decreased ERM (ezrin, radixin, moesin) protein phosphorylation,40 proteins that are involved in crosslinking of the plasma membrane with actin cytoskeleton,41 and increased apoptosis.32 Defective fiber cell migration has been found to be more notable in the Rho GDI overexpressing lenses than in the C3 exoenzyme expressing lenses (Fig. 2). The Rho GDI overexpressing lenses have shown a defective membrane localization of Rho, Rac and Cdc42 confirming their inactivation. These data, together with mechanistic studies performed using the lens epithelial cells and the noted effects on cell shape, actin polymerization, myosin phosphorylation and cell adhesive interactions, reveal the importance of Rho GTPase-dependent signaling pathways in processes underlying fiber cell migration, elongation, cytoskeletal and membrane organization and survival in the developing lens.7 Lens fiber cell BMC has been found to be localized intensely with Rac GTPase involved in cell migration (our unpublished work). Additionally, the Rho GDI transgenic lenses showed an impaired apical-apical cell-cell interactions between the fiber cells and epithelial cells.32 Moreover, the ruptured posterior capsule and disrupted suture lines in these lenses are indicative of defective BMC organization and activity.32Open in a separate windowFigure 2Abnormal lens phenotype in the neonatal Rho GDIα overexpressing transgenic mouse. Hematoxylin and eosin-stained sagittal sections of P1 RhoGDIα transgenic eyes reveal abnormal migration and morphology of the posterior lens fibers as compared with the symmetric organization of lens fibers and their migration toward the lens suture in the wild type mouse (reproduced with permission from Maddala et al.)32.Further support for involvement of Rho GTPases in lens fiber cell differentiation and survival has come from studies conducted with chick lens epithelial explants and cultured epithelial cells. Inactivation of Rho kinase or Rac activation by PI3 kinase in chick lens epithelial cells has been reported to induce fiber cell differentiation and survival in association with distinct cortical actin cytoskeletal reorganization, indicating the significance of Rho GTPases in lens fiber cell differentiation and survival.9,42 Additionally, lens fiber cell elongation and differentiation has been found to be associated with increased myosin light chain (MLC) phosphorylation, and inhibition of MLC phosphorylation regulated by MLC kinase and Rho kinase has induced lens opacity and disruption of cytoskeletal integrity, supporting the importance of myosin II activity in maintaining lens architecture and transparency.10 Importantly, various growth factors that regulate lens morphogenesis, fiber cell differentiation, and survival have been found to activate Rho and Rac GTPases and to induce MLC phosphorylation, actin cytoskeletal reorganization, and focal adhesion formation in lens epithelial cells.7,30 In addition to Rho GTPases, inhibition of Src kinase has been shown to induce fiber cell differentiation in association with actin cytoskeletal reorganization and cell adhesive interactions.43 Also, the expression and activation of focal adhesion kinase has been reported to increase in differentiating and migrating lens epithelial cells.44 Both these molecules are well recognized to regulate cell migration by participating in the disassembly of cell adhesions at the front of migrating cells.35Additional evidence for the participation of actin cytoskeletal organization and Rho GTPases in lens fiber cell migration and elongation has been derived from the studies of Abi-2 deficient mouse. Abl-interactor adaptor proteins Abi-1 and Abi-2 are linked to the Rac-WAVE-Arp2/3 signaling pathway and regulate actin polymerization and cell-cell adhesive interactions.45 Homozygous deletion of Abi-2 in mice has been shown to exhibit ocular phenotype including microphthalmia and lens opacity similar to the Rho GDI overexpressing transgenic mouse eyes noted in previous studies.23,32 In the absence of Abi-2, the secondary lens fiber orientation, migration and elongation were found to be defective, supporting the importance of Rac-WAVE-Arp2/3 signaling in lens fiber cell migration and cell adhesion.23 Abi-2 has been shown to localize intensely to the both basal and apical regions of the fiber cells and adherens junctions, and suppression of Abi-2 expression in epithelial cells resulted in impaired adherens junctions and downregulation of actin nucleation promoting factors.23 The significance of cytoskeletal signaling in lens has also been implicated in Lowe syndrome, a rare X-linked disorder characterized by congenital cataracts, results from mutations in the OCRL1 gene. The OCRL1 protein product (phosphatidylinositol 4, 5 bisphosphate 5-phosphatase) has been shown to participate in Rac GTPase regulated actin cytoskeletal organization, cell migration, and cell adhesion in various cell types.46 Finally, Wnt/PCP signaling via activation of Rho GTPases has been suggested to control lens morphogenesis, fiber cell migration and differentiation.26Importantly, given how the activity of the Rho GTPases is regulated by external cues and various effector proteins, a detailed understanding of the regulation of Rho GTPase signaling is necessary for a better appreciation of their role in lens morphogenesis, fiber cell elongation and differentiation, and tensional homeostasis. Further mechanistic studies are critical to unravel the specific role(s) of Rho GTPases and other cytoskeletal regulatory mechanisms involved in regulating the formation and disassembly of fiber cell basal and apical membrane complexes, fiber cell lateral membrane remodeling, and fiber cell-cell adhesive interactions during lens differentiation. Very little is known in terms of the assembly of different cell adhesive molecules at the apical-apical interface between the lens fibers and epithelial cells. We are only beginning to glimpse the regulatory networks involved in the regulation of fiber cell elongation, polarity, migration and adhesion. Many challenging questions remain: for example, how are the pathways regulating migration, basal and apical membrane complexes, and tensional homeostasis controlled by extracellular signals, and how are they integrated during fiber cell migration, suture formation, and packing? Novel insights into the molecular mechanisms regulating these cellular processes are expected to advance our understanding of lens morphogenesis, function and cataractogenesis.  相似文献   

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Summary The distribution of estradiol-concentrating cells in the pituitary of the platyfish, Xiphophorus maculatus, is studied after the injection of 3H estradiol-17 by thaw-mount autoradiography. Autoradiograms prepared 2–8 h after the injection show nuclear concentration of radioactivity in certain cells of the proximal pars distalis, while no nuclear labeling is found in cells of the rostral pars distalis, pars intermedia and pars nervosa. Radioactively labeled cells are identified as gonadotropes by a combined technique of thaw-mount autoradiography and immunoperoxidase staining with antiserum to ovine LH. Approximately 80% of the immunoreactive LH cells show a concentration of radioactivity in their nuclei. These observations indicate that in teleosts, as in mammals, estradiol has a direct effect on pituitary gonadotropes.Supported by PHS grant NS09914. The authors are grateful to Dr. D.G. Humm for providing the platyfish  相似文献   

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