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1.
Activin acts mitogenically on P19 cells as well as being inhibitory of the differentiation of retinoic acid-treated P19 cells and some neuroblastoma cell lines. Here, we show some lines of evidence that follistatin, an activin-binding protein, is also involved in neural differentiation. Counteracting the activity of activin, addition of follistatin suppresses the anchorage-independent growth of P19 cells in soft agar and stimulates neurite outgrowth of a neuroblastoma cell line, IMR-32 cells. While activin does not seem to be expressed significantly, follistatin is demonstrated in the conditioned medium of these cells. Furthermore, the expression of follistatin in P19 cells is subject to dynamic fluctuations in response to retinoic acid treatment. These neural cells may produce follistatin in a cell stage-specific manner in order to interact with exogenously derived activin.  相似文献   

2.
We have demonstrated a role for activin A, follistatin, and FSH in male germ cell differentiation at the time when spermatogonial stem cells and committed spermatogonia first appear in the developing testis. Testis fragments from 3-day-old rats were cultured for 1 or 3 days with various combinations of these factors, incubated with bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) to label proliferating cells, and then processed for stereological analysis and detection of BrdU incorporation. Gonocyte numbers were significantly elevated in cultures treated with activin, while the combination of FSH and the activin antagonist, follistatin, increased the proportion of spermatogonia in the germ cell population after 3 days. All fragment groups treated with FSH contained a significantly higher proportion of proliferating Sertoli cells, while activin and follistatin each reduced Sertoli cell division. In situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry on normal rat testes demonstrated that gonocytes, but not spermatogonia, contain the activin beta(A) subunit mRNA and protein. In contrast, gonocytes first expressed follistatin mRNA and protein at 3 days after birth, concordant with the transition of gonocytes to spermatogonia. Collectively, these data demonstrate that germ cells have the potential to regulate their own maturation through production of endogenous activin A and follistatin. Sertoli cells were observed to produce the activin/inhibin beta(A) subunit, the inhibin alpha subunit, and follistatin, demonstrating that these cells have the potential to regulate germ cell maturation as well as their own development. These findings indicate that local regulation of activin bioactivity may underpin the coordinated development of germ cells and somatic cells at the onset of spermatogenesis.  相似文献   

3.
FLRG and follistatin belong to the family of follistatin proteins involved in the regulation of various biological effects, such as hematopoiesis, mediated by their binding to activin and BMP, both members of the TGFbeta family. To further characterize the function of FLRG, we searched for other possible functional partners using a yeast two-hybrid screen. We identified human fibronectin as a new partner for both FLRG and follistatin. We also demonstrated that their physical interaction is mediated by type I motifs of fibronectin and follistatin domains. We then analyzed the biological consequences of these protein interactions on the regulation of hematopoiesis. For the first time, we associated a biological effect with the regulation of human hematopoietic cell adhesiveness of both the type I motifs of fibronectin and the follistatin domains of FLRG and follistatin. Indeed, we observed a significant and specific dose-dependent increase of cell adhesion to fibronectin in the presence of FLRG or follistatin, using either a human hematopoietic cell line or primary cells. In particular, we observed a significantly increased adhesion of immature hematopoietic precursors (CFC, LTC-IC). Altogether these results highlight a new mechanism by which FLRG and follistatin regulate human hematopoiesis.  相似文献   

4.
Site-specific mutagenesis of human follistatin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Follistatin is a monomeric protein originally discovered in ovarian follicular fluid as a suppressor of pituitary follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) secretion, and later identified as a binding protein for activin. To explore the role of the Asn-linked carbohydrate chains on the follistatin molecule in regard to the inhibition of FSH secretion and activin binding ability, site-specific mutations were introduced at either or both of the two potential Asn-linked glycosylation sites of human follistatin with 315 amino acids (hFS-315). The three types of follistatin mutants were expressed individually in Chinese hamster ovary cells. When tested for their ability to inhibit FSH secretion and to bind activin, each mutant was found to have a similar property as the non-mutated recombinant hFS-315, suggesting that glycosylation of the follistatin molecule has no effect in these functions. However, a two amino acid insertion in between the second and the third amino acid residues in hFS-315 caused the resulting compound to lose completely its inhibitory activity on FSH secretion from the pituitary as well as its binding ability to activin. This finding suggests that the amino-terminal region of the follistatin molecule is critical for both of these functions.  相似文献   

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7.
An increase in the interaction between advanced glycation end-products (AGEs) and their receptor RAGE is believed to contribute to the pathogenesis of chronic complications of Diabetes mellitus, which can include bone alterations such as osteopenia. We have recently found that extracellular AGEs can directly regulate the growth and development of rat osteosarcoma UMR106 cells, and of mouse calvaria-derived MC3T3E1 osteoblasts throughout their successive developmental stages (proliferation, differentiation and mineralisation), possibly by the recognition of AGEs moieties by specific osteoblastic receptors which are present in both cell lines. In the present study we examined the possible expression of RAGE by UMR106 and MC3T3E1 osteoblastic cells, by immunoblot analysis. We also investigated whether short-, medium- or long-term exposure of osteoblasts to extracellular AGEs, could modify their affinity constant and maximal binding for AGEs (by 125I-AGE-BSA binding experiments), their expression of RAGE (by immunoblot analysis) and the activation status of the osteoblastic ERK 1/2 signal transduction mechanism (by immunoblot analysis for ERK and P-ERK). Our results show that both osteoblastic cell lines express readily detectable levels of RAGE. Short-term exposure of phenotypically mature osteoblastic UMR106 cells to AGEs decrease the cellular density of AGE-binding sites while increasing the affinity of these sites for AGEs. This culture condition also dose-dependently increased the expression of RAGE and the activation of ERK. In proliferating MC3T3E1 pre-osteoblasts, 24–72 h exposure to AGEs did not modify expression of RAGE, ERK activation or the cellular density of AGE-binding sites. However, it did change the affinity of these binding sites for AGEs, with both higher- and lower-affinity sites now being apparent. Medium-term (1 week) incubation of differentiated MC3T3E1 osteoblasts with AGEs, induced a simultaneous increase in RAGE expression and in the relative amount of P-ERK. Mineralising MC3T3E1 cultures grown for 3 weeks in the presence of extracellular AGEs showed a decrease both in RAGE and P-ERK expression. These results indicate that, in phenotypically mature osteoblastic cells, changes in ERK activation closely follow the AGEs-induced regulation of RAGE expression. Thus, the AGEs-induced biological effects that we have observed previously in osteoblasts, could be mediated by RAGE in the later stages of development, and mediated by other AGE receptors in the earlier pre-osteoblastic stage.  相似文献   

8.
There is growing interest in osteoinductive agents for fracture healing especially in patients with non-union or delayed-union fractures. The aim of the present study is the assessment of the association of Vitamins D3 and K1 on proliferation and differentiation of human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) derived from fracture sites in view of a possible clinical use. The synergic effect of Vitamin D3 and Vitamin K2 in preventing osteoporosis has been documented in clinical practice; however no reports investigating this association for fracture healing are present. Our data show a different outcome on cell proliferation linked to the different timing of drug administration as well as a synergic effect of the two vitamins on cell differentiation. The high level of osteocalcin and carboxylated osteocalcin detected in hMSCs treated with the association of the two vitamins in comparison with controls and with single vitamin administration underline the differentiation of these cells into osteoblastic phenotype. Our results indicate for the first time that vitamin D3 and K1 association is able to modulate in vitro the differentiation towards osteoblastic phenotype of hMSCs derived from fracture sites, thus offering clinicians a promising and low-cost strategy for reparative osteogenesis.  相似文献   

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Human prostatic carcinoma frequently metastasizes to bone tissue and activates bone metabolism, especially bone formation, at the site of metastasis. It has been reported that an extract of prostatic carcinoma and conditioned medium (CM) of a human prostatic carcinoma cell line, PC-3, established from a bone metastastic lesion, stimulate osteoblastic cell proliferation. However, there is little information about the effect of PC-3 CM on the differentiation of osteoblastic cells. In this study, we investigated the effect of PC-3 CM on the differentiation of two types of osteoblastic cells, primary fetal rat calvaria (RC) cells containing many undifferentiated osteoprogenitor cells, and ROS 17/2.8, a well-differentiated rat osteosarcoma cell line. PC-3 CM inhibited bone nodule formation and the activity of alkaline phosphatase (ALPase), an osteoblastic marker enzyme, on days 7, 14, and 21 (RC cells) or 3, 6, and 9 (ROS 17/2.8 cells) in a dose-dependent manner (5–30% CM). However, the CM did not affect cell proliferation or cell viability. PC-3 CM was found to markedly block the gene expression of ALPase and osteocalcin (OCN) mRNAs but had no effect on the mRNA expression of osteopontin (OPN), the latter two being noncollagenous proteins related to bone matrix mineralization. These findings suggest that PC-3 CM contains a factor that inhibits osteoblastic cell differentiation and that this factor may be involved in the process of bone metastasis from prostatic carcinoma. J. Cell. Biochem. 67:248–256, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of follistatin on activin-induced granulosa cell differentiation was investigated in freshly harvested granulosa cells from diethylstilbestrol (DES)-treated rats. Activin induced a remarkable change in granulosa cellular morphology from elongated fibroblast-like to round cells, which follistatin prevented. Follistatin itself had no influence on the cellular morphology. We studied the action of follistatin on activin-induced differentiation of granulosa cells cultured in a chemically defined medium. Addition of activin (30 ng/ml) to the culture increased the FSH binding site approximately 2-fold compared with the control (spontaneous expression) level, whereas follistatin reduced the activin-induced expression level to the control level in a concentration-dependent manner. Activin (30 ng/ml) markedly augmented FSH-induced hCG binding and progesterone production by approximately 20-fold, and these effects were suppressed by follistatin in a concentration-dependent manner. Similarly, addition of follistatin to the culture induced a concentration-dependent decrease of activin-enhanced inhibin-producing activity, but had no effect on FSH-induced inhibin production. These results suggest that follistatin/activin-binding protein binds to activin stoichiometrically to suppress the activin-induced differentiation of rat granulosa cell in vitro, but follistatin itself has no direct effect on activin-independent reactions.  相似文献   

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13.
Osteoblasts and adipocytes are thought to differentiate from a common stromal progenitor cell. These two phenotypically mature cell types show a high degree of plasticity, which can be observed when cells are grown under specific culture conditions. Gap junctions are abundant among osteoblastic cells in vivo and in vitro, whereas they are down-regulated during adipogenesis. Gap junctional communication (GJC) modulates the expression of genes associated with the mature osteoblastic phenotype. Inhibition of GJC utilizing 18-alpha-glycyrrhetinic acid (AGRA) blocks the maturation of pre-osteoblastic cells in vitro. Moreover, cytoplasmic lipid droplets are detectable at the end of the culture period, suggesting that GJC inhibition may favor an adipocytic phenotype. We used several human osteoblastic cell lines, as well as bone-derived primary osteoblastic cells, to show that confluent cultures of human osteoblastic cells grown under osteogenic conditions developed an adipocytic phenotype after 3 days of complete inhibition of GJC using AGRA or oleamide, two dissimilar nontoxic reversible inhibitors. Development of an adipogenic phenotype was confirmed by the accumulation of triglyceride droplets and the increase in mRNA expression of the adipocytic markers peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma2 and lipoprotein lipase. Glycyrrhizic acid, a noninhibitory AGRA analog, or alpha-bromopalmitate, a nondegradable fatty acid, had no effect. Modulation of skeletal GJC may represent a new pharmacological target by which inhibition of marrow adipogenesis can take place with the parallel enhancement of osteoblastogenesis, thus providing a novel therapeutic approach to the treatment of human age-related osteopenic diseases and postmenopausal osteoporosis.  相似文献   

14.
Activin stimulates proliferation of rat ovarian thecal-interstitial cells   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
There is growing evidence that the function of ovarian theca-interstitial (T-I) cells may be modulated by paracrine actions of activin, inhibin, and follistatin. Furthermore, either dysregulation, dysfunction, or both, of these peptides may play a role in conditions associated with T-I hyperplasia, such as polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) and hyperthecosis. This study was designed to evaluate the role of activin, inhibin, and follistatin in the modulation of T-I cell proliferation. Interaction of these peptides with insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I), a known stimulator of T-I cell proliferation, was also assessed. Purified rat T-I cells were cultured for 48 h in chemically defined media and with or without activin (3-30 ng/ml), inhibin (3-30 ng/ml), follistatin (100 ng/ml), and/or IGF-I (10 nM). T-I cell proliferation was assessed using radiolabeled thymidine incorporation assay. Activin alone stimulated proliferation of T-I cells in a dose-dependent fashion (by up to 320% above control; P < 0.001), whereas inhibin alone or follistatin alone had no significant effect. Inhibin had also no effect on activin-induced proliferation. Follistatin significantly reduced the stimulatory effects of activin and decreased proliferation by up to 46% (P < 0.01) below the level attained in the presence of activin alone. IGF-I (10 nM), at a dose producing a near-maximal effect, increased proliferation by 175% above control (P < 0.001); insulin (10 nM) increased proliferation by 52% above control (P < 0.03). A combination of IGF-I (10 nM) and activin (30 ng/ml) resulted in a 1090% increase of proliferation above control (P < 0.001); this stimulatory effect was significantly greater than that achieved in the presence of either activin alone or IGF-I alone (P < 0.001). Similarly, a combination of insulin (10 nM) and activin (30 ng/ml) increased proliferation by 506% above control levels. Flow cytometry evaluation revealed that activin increased the proportion of actively dividing cells (in S or G2/M phase of the cell cycle) by 42% (P < 0.02), whereas IGF-I had no effect on the proportion of actively dividing cells. The present findings indicate that an activin-follistatin system may be involved in the regulation of the size of ovarian thecal-stromal compartment. In view of the synergy between activin and IGF-I, and the difference in the effects on the cell cycle distribution, stimulation of T-I proliferation by these agents is likely to be mediated via separate transduction pathways. Excess activin or insufficient follistatin may contribute to T-I hyperplasia.  相似文献   

15.
To determine the effects of transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) on the different cell types that exist in bone, cell populations (I-IV), progressively enriched in osteoblastic cells relative to fibroblastic cells, were prepared from fetal rat calvaria using timed collagenase digestions. TGF-beta did not induce anchorage-independent growth of these cells, nor was anchorage-dependent growth stimulated in most populations studied, despite a two- to threefold increase in the synthesis of cellular proteins. In all populations the synthesis of secreted proteins increased 2-3.5-fold. In particular, collagen, fibronectin, and plasminogen activator inhibitor synthesis was stimulated. However, different degrees of stimulation of individual proteins were observed both within and between cell populations. A marked preferential stimulation of plasminogen activator inhibitor was observed in each population, together with a slight preferential stimulation of collagen; the effect on collagen expression being directed primarily at type I collagen. In contrast, the synthesis of SPARC (secreted protein acidic rich in cysteine/osteonectin was stimulated approximately two-fold by TGF-beta, but only in fibroblastic populations. Collectively, these results demonstrate that TGF-beta stimulates matrix production by bone cells and, through differential effects on individual matrix components, may also influence the nature of the matrix formed by different bone cell populations. In the presence of TGF-beta, osteoblastic cells lost their polygonal morphology and alkaline phosphatase activity was decreased, reflecting a suppression of osteoblastic features. The differential effects of TGF-beta on bone cell populations are likely to be important in bone remodeling and fracture repair.  相似文献   

16.
Activin and the activin-binding protein follistatin modulate a variety of biological processes and are abundant at sites of muscle development. Activin and follistatin were expressed in developing chick pectoral musclein vivoand in primary cell culture. Addition of recombinant activin inhibited muscle development in a dose-dependent manner as measured by the number of nuclei in myosin heavy chain positive cells and creatine phosphokinase activity. Conversely, follistatin potentiated muscle development. The effects of activin were found to be distinct from those of the related protein transforming growth factor (TGF) β1. Muscle development was repressed by activin at all time points investigated and did not recover with the removal of activin following a limited exposure. In contrast, while myogenic differentiation in TGFβ1 was initially repressed, muscle marker expression recovered to control levels—even in the continued presence of TGFβ1. Fibroblast growth factor (FGF) had little effect on inhibiton of muscle development caused by activin A. However, inhibition of development produced by TGFβ increased with increasing concentrations of FGF. Finally, early expression of myoD and myf5 mRNA by muscle cultures in the presence of activin and follistatin was analyzed. Activin-treated cultures expressed reduced myoD and myf5 levels at 1.5 days after plating. Myf5 levels in follistatin-treated cultures were elevated, but, surprisingly, these cultures showed a reduction in myoD levels. These data suggest that endogenously expressed activin and follistatin are important modulators of muscle development.  相似文献   

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18.
Various osteoblastic cell lines were examined for the relationship between the presence of cell-surface transforming growth factor (TGF)-β receptors and the synthesis of matrix proteins with their responsiveness to TGF-β. Treatment with TGF-β1 inhibited proliferation and stimulated proteoglycan and fibronectin synthesis in MC3T3-E1 and MG 63 cells. The major proteoglycans synthesized by these cells were decorin and biglycan, and TGF-β1 markedly stimulated the synthesis of decorin in MC3T3-E1 and of biglycan in MG 63 cells. SaOS 2 and UMR 106 cells synthesized barely detectable amounts of decorin or biglycan, and TGF-β1 did not stimulate the synthesis of these proteoglycans. In SaOS 2 cells, however, TGF-β1 enhanced fibronectin synthesis. TGF-β1 did not show any of these effects in UMR 106 cells. Receptor cross-linking studies revealed that only MC3T3-E1 and MG 63 cells had both types I and II signal-transducing receptors for TGF-β in addition to betaglycan. SaOS 2 cells possessed type I but no type II receptor on the cell surface. In contrast, SaOS 2 as well as MC3T3-E1 and MG 63 cells expressed type II receptor mRNA by Northern blot analysis, and cell lysates contained type II receptor by Western blot analysis. Thus, it appears that type II receptor present in SaOS 2 cells is not able to bind TGF-β1 under these conditions. UMR 106 cells with no response to TGF-β1 had neither of the signal-transducing receptors by any of the analyses. These observations using clonal osteoblastic cell lines demonstrate that the ability of osteoblastic cells to synthesize bone matrix proteoglycans is associated with the responsiveness of these cells to TGF-β1, that the responsiveness of osteoblastic cells to TGF-β1 in cell proliferation and proteoglycan synthesis correlates with the presence of both types I and II receptors, and that the effect of TGF-β1 on fibronectin synthesis can develop with little binding of TGF-β1 to type II receptor if type I receptor is present. It is suggested that the combination of cell-surface receptors for TGF-β determines the responsiveness of osteoblastic cells to TGF-β and that changes in cell-surface TGF-β receptors may play a role in the regulation of matrix protein synthesis and bone formation in osteoblasts. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

19.
Follistatin, an activin-binding protein secreted by cultured rat granulosa cells, was shown to associate with the cell surface by affinity labeling with 125I-activin. Addition of follistatin to the cultured cells demonstrated a typical ligand-binding saturation curve, suggesting that granulosa cells have a specific binding site for follistatin. This binding was markedly inhibited by heparin and heparan sulfate, but not by chondroitin sulfates A and C, keratan sulfate, and dermatan sulfate. When granulosa cells were treated with glycosaminoglycan-degrading enzymes before or after addition of follistatin to the cultures, heparinase and heparitinase treatments resulted in significant suppression of the binding, whereas treatment with chondroitinase ABC had no effect. A competition study of the binding using heparin derivatives demonstrated that follistatin seemed to recognize O-sulfate groups in the heparin molecule. Heparitinase-treated granulosa cells exhibited almost full responsiveness to activin, indicating that the enzyme treatment had no effect on activin and receptor interaction. These results suggest that follistatin/activin-binding protein binds to heparan sulfate side chains of proteoglycans on the granulosa cell surface to regulate the various actions of activin.  相似文献   

20.
Microtubule actin crosslinking factor 1 (MACF1), a widely expressed cytoskeletal linker, plays important roles in various cells by regulating cytoskeleton dynamics. However, its role in osteoblastic cells is not well understood. Based on our previous findings that the association of MACF1 with F-actin and microtubules in osteoblast-like cells was altered under magnetic force conditions, here, by adopting a stable MACF1-knockdown MC3T3-E1 osteoblastic cell line, we found that MACF1 knockdown induced large cells with a binuclear/multinuclear structure. Further, immunofluorescence staining showed disorganization of F-actin and microtubules in MACF1-knockdown cells. Cell counting revealed significant decrease of cell proliferation and cell cycle analysis showed an S phase cell cycle arrest in MACF1-knockdown cells. Moreover and interestingly, MACF1 knockdown showed a potential effect on cellular MTT reduction activity and mitochondrial content, suggesting an impact on cellular metabolic activity. These results together indicate an important role of MACF1 in regulating osteoblastic cell morphology and function. [BMB Reports 2015; 48(10): 583-588]  相似文献   

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