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1.
Two cDNA clones encoding the small proteoglycan II (PG II) of bone were isolated from a lambda gt11 expression library. These clones expressed recombinant protein which was cross-reactive with polyclonal and monoclonal antisera to PG II molecules from several connective tissues. The longest clone, lambda Pg 20 was studied in detail. The clone was shown to encode PG II by hybrid selected translation and immunoprecipitation. Northern analysis showed two species of the PG II message of approximately 1.4 and 1.8 kb. Substantial amounts of PG II message were found in bone, tendon, articular cartilage, skin, smooth muscle and cornea. Trace amounts of message were also detected in liver and brain. Radiolabeled bovine PG II cDNA hybridized to RNA from several other species including the human, rat and chicken. The level of PG II mRNA in chick embryonic fibroblasts was sensitive to transformation by Rous sarcoma virus.  相似文献   

2.
The aim of this work was to prepare specific antibodies against skin and bone collagen (type I) and cartilage collagen (type II) for the study of differential collagen synthesis during development of the chick embryo by immunofluorescence. Antibodies against native type I collagen from chick cranial bone, and native pepsin-extracted type II collagen from chick sternal cartilage were raised in rabbits, rats, and guinea pigs. The antibodies, purified by cross-absorption on the heterologous collagen type, followed by absorption and elution from the homologous collagen type, were specific according to passive hemagglutination tests and indirect immunofluorescence staining of chick bone and cartilage tissues. Antibodies specific to type I collagen labeled bone trabeculae from tibia and perichondrium from sternal cartilage. Antibodies specific to type II collagen stained chondrocytes of sternal and epiphyseal cartilage, whereas fluorescence with intercellular cartilage collagen was obtained only after treatment with hyaluronidase. Applying type II collagen antibodies to sections of chick embryos, the earliest cartilage collagen found was in the notochord, at stage 15, followed by vertebral collagen secreted by sclerotome cells adjacent to the notochord from stage 25 onwards. Type I collagen was found in the dermatomal myotomal plate and presumptive dermis at stage 17, in limb mesenchyme at stage 24, and in the perichondrium of tibiae at stage 31.  相似文献   

3.
Although the zebrafish has become a popular model organism for vertebrate developmental and genetic analyses, its use in transgenic studies still suffers from the scarcity of homologous gene promoters. In the present study, three different zebrafish cDNA clones were isolated and sequenced completely, and their expression patterns were characterized by whole‐mount in situ hybridization as well as by Northern blot hybridization. The first clone encodes a type II cytokeratin (CK), which is specifically expressed in skin epithelia in early embryos and prominently expressed in the adult skin tissue. The second clone is muscle specific and encodes a muscle creatine kinase (MCK). The third clone, expressed ubiquitously in all tissues, is derived from an acidic ribosomal phosphoprotein P0 (arp) gene. In order to test the fidelity of zebrafish embryos in transgenic expression, the promoters of the three genes were isolated using a rapid linker‐mediated PCR approach and subsequently ligated to a modified green fluorescent protein (gfp) reporter gene. When the three hybrid GFP constructs were introduced into zebrafish embryos by microinjection, the three promoters were activated faithfully in developing zebrafish embryos. The 2.2‐kb ck promoter was sufficient to direct GFP expression in skin epithelia, although a weak expression in muscle was also observed in a few embryos. This pattern of transgenic expression is consistent with the expression pattern of the endogenous cytokeratin gene. The 1.5‐kb mck promoter/gfp was expressed exclusively in skeletal muscles and not elsewhere. By contrast, the 0.8‐kb ubiquitous promoter plus the first intron of the arp gene were capable of expressing GFP in a variety of tissues, including the skin, muscle, lens, neurons, notochord, and circulating blood cells. Our experiments, therefore, further demonstrated that zebrafish embryos can faithfully express exogenously introduced genes under the control of zebrafish promoters. Dev. Genet. 25:158–167, 1999. © 1999 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

4.
Two tissue-specific promoters were used to express both green fluorescent protein (GFP) and red fluorescent protein (RFP) in transgenic zebrafish embryos. One promoter (CK), derived from a cytokeratin gene, is active specifically in skin epithelia in embryos, and the other promoter (MLC) from a muscle-specific gene encodes a myosin light chain 2 polypeptide. When the 2 promoters drove the 2 reporter genes to express in the same embryos, both genes were faithfully expressed in the respective tissues, skin or muscle. When the 2 fluorescent proteins were expressed in the same skin or muscle cells under the same promoter, GFP fluorescence appeared earlier than RFP fluorescence in both skin and muscle tissues, probably owing to a higher detection sensitivity of GFP. However, RFP appeared to be more stable as its fluorescence steadily increased during development. Finally, F1 transgenic offspring were obtained expressing GFP in skin cells under the CK promoter and RFP in muscle cells under the MLC promoter. Our study demonstrates the feasibility of monitoring expression of multiple genes in different tissues in the same transgenic organism.  相似文献   

5.
The expression of DNA topoisomerase II alpha and beta genes was studied in murine normal tissues. Northern blot analysis using probes specific for the two genes showed that the patterns of expression were different among 22 tissues of adult mice. Expression levels of topoisomerase II alpha gene were high in proliferating tissues, such as bone marrow and spleen, and undetectable or low in 17 other tissues. In contrast, high or intermediate expression of topoisomerase II beta gene was found in a variety of tissues (15) of adult mice, including those with no proliferating cells. Topoisomerase II gene expression was also studied during murine development. In whole embryos both genes were expressed at higher levels in early than late stages of embryogenesis. Heart, brain and liver of embryos two days before delivery, and these same tissues plus lung and thymus of newborn (1-day-old) mice expressed appreciable levels of the two genes. Interestingly, a post-natal induction of the beta gene expression was observed in the brain but not in the liver; conversely, the expression of the alpha gene was increased 1 day after birth in the liver but not in the brain. However, gene expression of a proliferation-associated enzyme, thymidylate synthase, was similar in these tissues between embryos and newborns. Thus, the two genes were differentially regulated in the post-natal period, and a tissue-specific role may be suggested for the two isoenzymes in the development of differentiated tissues such as the brain and liver. Based on the differential patterns of expression of the two isoforms, this analysis indicates that topoisomerase II alpha may be a specific marker of cell proliferation, whereas topoisomerase II beta may be implicated in functions of DNA metabolism other than replication.  相似文献   

6.
Growth of limb muscle is dependent on skeletal-derived Indian hedgehog   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
During embryogenesis, muscle and bone develop in close temporal and spatial proximity. We show that Indian Hedgehog, a bone-derived signaling molecule, participates in growth of skeletal muscle. In Ihh−/− embryos, skeletal muscle development appears abnormal at embryonic day 14.5 and at later ages through embryonic day 20.5, dramatic losses of hindlimb muscle occur. To further examine the role of Ihh in myogenesis, we manipulated Ihh expression in the developing chick hindlimb. Reduction of Ihh in chicken embryo hindlimbs reduced skeletal muscle mass similar to that seen in Ihh−/− mouse embryos. The reduction in muscle mass appears to be a direct effect of Ihh since ectopic expression of Ihh by RCAS retroviral infection of chicken embryo hindlimbs restores muscle mass. These effects are independent of bone length, and occur when Shh is not expressed, suggesting Ihh acts directly on fetal myoblasts to regulate secondary myogenesis. Loss of muscle mass in Ihh null mouse embryos is accompanied by a dramatic increase in myoblast apoptosis by a loss of p21 protein. Our data suggest that Ihh promotes fetal myoblast survival during their differentiation into secondary myofibers by maintaining p21 protein levels.  相似文献   

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9.
Direct evidence that IGF-I has any significant effect on embryo growth is lacking. We therefore studied the effect of administration of IGF-I on the chick embryo in ovo. Five hundred ng pure IGF-I (purified from human plasma) were given to chick embryos on 2 occasions (7 and 14 d) by injection directly into the allantoic sac. Treated and control (saline injected) chicks hatched on the same day and were killed. IGF-I appeared to reach the tissues as the [35S]-sulphate uptake of treated sternal cartilage was significantly greater than that of control (P less than 0.02). However, there were no significant effects of treatment on total body weight, bone length measurements, organ (lung, liver, heart) weights, muscle DNA, RNA or protein levels. From these results we conclude that administration of exogenous IGF-I to the chick embryo at 7 and 14 d does not stimulate further growth of the chick embryo.  相似文献   

10.
The six proteins of the CCN family have important roles in development, angiogenesis, cell motility, proliferation, and other fundamental cell processes. To date, CCN5 distribution in developing rodents and humans has not been mapped comprehensively. CCN5 strongly inhibits adult smooth muscle cell proliferation and motility. Its anti-proliferative action predicts that CCN5 would not be present in developing tissues until the proliferation phase of tissue morphogenesis is complete. However, estrogen induces CCN5 expression in epithelial and smooth muscle cells, suggesting that CCN5 might be widely expressed in embryonic tissues exposed to high levels of estrogen. 9–16 day murine embryos and fetuses and 3–7 month human fetal tissues were analyzed by immunohistochemistry. CCN5 was detected in nearly all developing tissues. CCN5 protein expression was initially present in most tissues, and at later times in development tissue-specific expression differences were observed. CCN5 expression was particularly strong in vascular tissues, cardiac muscle, bronchioles, myotendinous junctions, and intestinal smooth muscle and epithelium. CCN5 expression was initially absent in bone cartilaginous forms but was increasingly expressed during bone endochondral ossification. Widespread CCN5 mRNA expression was detected in GD14.5 mice. Although CCN2 and CCN5 protein expression patterns in some adult pathologic conditions are inversely expressed, this expression pattern was not found in developing mouse and human tissues. The widespread expression pattern of CCN5 in most embryonic and fetal tissues suggests a diverse range of functions for CCN5. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

11.
A water-soluble fraction of a 4 M guanidine HCl extract of demineralized adult bovine bone stimulated the differentiation of cartilage in explants of minced skeletal muscle from embryonic chick legs; cartilage was also induced by a semipurified protein preparation. Cartilage could be identified in treated cultures at 1 week with muscle from day-9 embryos, not before 2 weeks with muscle from day-12 embryos, and not before 3 weeks with muscle from day-19 embryos. The ability to respond to this water-soluble fraction by exhibiting cartilage differentiation was dose-dependent, but not confined to any particular muscle region of the day-12 embryonic leg. These observations indicate that bone-derived soluble chondroinductive agents act on cells in minced embryonic muscle preparations. The induction of cartilage is dependent upon the accessibility of the responding cells to the agents, on the concentration of inductive agents, and on the developmental age of the responsive tissue.  相似文献   

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14.
Uninfected chicken cells were found to contain endogenous avian myeloblastosis virus (AMV)-specific information. Different tissues from chicken embryos and chickens expressed different amounts of the AMV-specific information. The endogenous AMV-related RNA was most abundant in bone marrow cells, which contained about 20 copies per cell. About 5 to 10 copies of AMV endogenous RNA per cell were found in embryonic yolk sac cells and bursa cells. The spleen, muscle, liver, and kidney cells of chickens and the fibroblasts of chicken embryos contained about two copies per cell. The amounts of AMV endogenous RNA in bone marrow, yolk sac, and bursa varied with age. From 19-day-old embryos to 2-week-old chickens, the bone marrow contained 20 copies of AMV RNA per cell. Bone marrow cells from 2-year-old chickens contained five copies per cell. Yolk sac cells of 10-day-old embryos and 1-day-old chickens were found to contain two copies per cell, whereas in 15- to 17-day-old embryos, these cells contained 5 to 10 copies. These results indicate that the level of endogenous AMV expression correlates with the development of granulopoiesis of the chicken hemopoietic system. The results of experiments on the thermostability of RNA-DNA hybrids indicated that the endogenous AMV RNA is closely related to viral AMV RNA. The expression of endogenous AMV information is independent of the activity of the chick helper factor. This endogenous AMV information is expressed as 20 to 21S RNA in both bone marrow and yolk sac cells.  相似文献   

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16.
We recently identified a new Z-disc protein, CHAP (Cytoskeletal Heart-enriched Actin-associated Protein), which is expressed in striated muscle and plays an important role during embryonic muscle development in mouse and zebrafish. Here, we confirm and further extend these findings by (i) the identification and characterization of the CHAP orthologue in chick and (ii) providing a detailed analysis of CHAP expression in mouse during embryonic and adult stages. Chick CHAP contains a PDZ domain and a nuclear localization signal, resembling the human and mouse CHAPa. CHAP is expressed in the developing heart and somites, as well as muscle precursors of the limb buds in mouse and chick embryos. CHAP expression in heart and skeletal muscle is maintained in adult mice, both in slow and fast muscle fibers. Moreover, besides expression in striated muscle, we demonstrate that CHAP is expressed in smooth muscle cells of aorta, carotid and coronary arteries in adult mice, but not during embryonic development.  相似文献   

17.
Changes in prolyl hydroxylase activity and immunoreactive protein were studied in various chick embryo tissues during the embryonic development. Both the enzyme activity and the amoung of immunoreactive protein increased till the 16th day of development and declined thereafter in all tissues studied. Comparison of the enzyme activity to the content of the total immuno-reactive protein indicated that there are distinct differences in the degree of enzyme activity between different chick embryo tissues, and in the same tissue between different stages of embryonic development. The highest relative enzyme activities were found in cartilage and skin, in which about 60% of the enzyme was active on the 16th day of development and only 20-30% was active on the 20th day of development; the lowest values were observed in spleen and large vessels, in which below 10% of the enzyme protein was in the active form on the 20th day of development Gel filtration studies demonstrated that in cartilage of 16-day-old chick embryos about 60% of the total immunoreactive enzyme in the tissue was present in the form of active prolylhydroxylase tetramer, whereas on the 20th day of development only 30% of the enzyme protein in cartilage was in the tetramer form. By contrast, in large vessels of the 16-day-old chick embryos, essentially all the enzyme was in the form of prolyl hydroxylase monomers.  相似文献   

18.
We have employed a highly specific in situ hybridization protocol that allows differential detection of mRNAs of collagen types I and II in paraffin sections from chick embryo tissues. All probes were cDNA restriction fragments encoding portions of the C-propeptide region of the pro alpha-chain, and some of the fragments also encoded the 3'-untranslated region of mRNAs of either type I or type II collagen. Smears of tendon fibroblasts and those of sternal chondrocytes from 17-d-old chick embryos as well as paraffin sections of 10-d-old whole embryos and of the cornea of 6.5-d-old embryos were hybridized with 3H-labeled probes for either type I or type II collagen mRNA. Autoradiographs revealed that the labeling was prominent in tendon fibroblasts with the type I collagen probe and in sternal chondrocytes with the type II collagen probe; that in the cartilage of sclera and limbs from 10-d-old embryos, the type I probe showed strong labeling of fibroblast sheets surrounding the cartilage and of a few chondrocytes in the cartilage, whereas the type II probe labeled chondrocytes intensely and only a few fibroblasts; and that in the cornea of 6.5-d-old embryos, the type I probe labeled the epithelial cells and fibroblasts in the stroma heavily, and the endothelial cells slightly, whereas the type II probe labeled almost exclusively the epithelial cells except for a slight labeling in the endothelial cells. These data indicate that embryonic tissues express these two collagen genes separately and/or simultaneously and offer new approaches to the study of the cellular regulation of extracellular matrix components.  相似文献   

19.
Two putative receptors for fibroblast growth factor (FGF) of approximately 150 and 200 kD were identified in membrane preparations from chick embryos. Specific binding (femtomoles/milligram) of 125I-aFGF to whole chick embryonic membranes was relatively constant from day 2 to 7, then decreased fivefold between days 7 and 13. Day-19 chick embryos retained 125I-aFGF binding at low levels to brain, eye, and liver tissues but not to skeletal muscle or cardiac tissues. The 200-kD FGF receptor began to decline between day 4.5 and 7 and was barely detectable by day 9, whereas the 150-kD FGF receptor began to decline by day 7 but was still detectable in day-9 embryonic membranes. It is not known whether the two FGF-binding proteins represent altered forms of one polypeptide, but it is clear that their levels undergo differential changes during development. Because endogenous chick FGF may remain bound to FGF receptor in membrane preparations, membranes were treated with acidic (pH 4.0) buffers to release bound FGF; such treatment did not affect 125I-aFGF binding and moderately increased the number of binding sites in day-7 and -19 embryos. Consequently, the observed loss of high affinity 125I-aFGF binding sites and FGF-binding polypeptides most likely represents a loss of FGF receptor protein. These experiments provide in vivo evidence to support the hypothesis that regulation of FGF receptor levels may function as a mechanism for controlling FGF-dependent processes during embryonic development.  相似文献   

20.
The development of the chick embryonic calvarium, an intramembranous bone, is characterized by direct differentiation of cranial ectomesenchymal cells into osteoblasts without the formation of a cartilage anlage. Collagen biosynthesis remains predominantly as type I in the calvaria. However, in severely calcium-deficient chick embryos maintained in shell-less (SL) culture, cartilage-specific type II collagen is synthesized by the calvaria. Immunohistochemistry localized the cells expressing type II collagen to undermineralized regions of the SL bone. In this study, collagen gene expression in bones of normal (N) and calcium-deficient SL chick embryos was examined at Incubation Day 14 by in situ cDNA-mRNA hybridization. A critical step in the procedure, which used biotinylated cDNA probes, was the selection of fixation conditions which maximized RNA retention and maintenance of tissue morphology. Tissues fixed in modified Carnoy's fixative (58% ethanol, 30% choloroform, 10% acetic acid, 2% formaldehyde) for 2-4 hr at -20 degrees C sectioned well and retained their cell morphology and cytoplasmic RNA. Other treatments important for the procedure included demineralization in 0.25 M HCl and removal of matrix by hyaluronidase digestion. In situ hybridization with type-specific collagen cDNA probes revealed that type II collagen mRNA was present in cells throughout the SL calvaria. More importantly, cells with type II collagen mRNA were also present in N calvaria which do not synthesize the protein. The overall abundance of type II-positive cells in N calvaria was not significantly different from that in SL calvaria, but their distribution throughout the bones differed. In general, the regional distribution of type II cells was inversely correlated with the extent of matrix mineralization. In the N calvaria, cells containing collagen type II mRNA were absent in the extensively mineralized superior zone, but were found in the temporal zone which showed limited mineralization. On the other hand, in the SL calvaria, which were substantially undermineralized overall, cells with type II mRNA were found throughout the tissue. Interestingly, the overall ratio of type I cells to type II cells was approximately 50% higher in N calvaria. These findings suggest that collagen type mRNA expression in the chick embryonic calvarium is correlated with, and perhaps dependent on, the extent of tissue matrix mineralization.  相似文献   

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