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1.
Hair follicle (HF) morphogenesis and cycling are a result of intricate autonomous epithelial-mesenchymal interactions. Once the first HF cycle is complete it repeatedly undergoes cyclic transformations. Heparan sulfate (HS) proteoglycans are found on the cell surface and in the extracellular matrix where they influence a variety of biological processes by interacting with physiologically important proteins, such as growth factors. Inhibition of heparanase (an HS endoglycosidase) in in vitro cultured HFs has been shown to induce a catagen-like process. Therefore, this study aimed to elucidate the precise role of HS in HF morphogenesis and cycling. An inducible tetratransgenic mouse model was generated to excise exostosin glycosyltransferase 1 (Ext1) in keratin 14-positive cells from P21. Interestingly, EXT1StEpiΔ/StEpiΔ mice presented solely anagen HFs. Moreover, waxing the fur to synchronize the HFs revealed accelerated hair regrowth in the EXT1StEpiΔ/StEpiΔ mice and hindered cycling into catagen. The ablation of HS in the interfollicular epidermal cells of mature skin led to the spontaneous formation of new HFs and an increase in Sonic Hedgehog expression resembling wild-type mice at P0, thereby indicating that the HS/Sonic Hedgehog signaling pathway regulates HF formation during embryogenesis and prevents HF formation in mature skin. Finally, the knock-out of HS also led to the morphogenesis and hyperplasia of sebaceous glands and sweat glands in mature mice, leading to exacerbated sebum production and accumulation on the skin surface. Therefore, our findings clearly show that an intricate control of HS levels is required for HF, sebaceous gland, and sweat gland morphogenesis and HF cycling.  相似文献   

2.
BackgroundHeparan sulfate (HS) is a sulfated linear polysaccharide on cell surfaces that plays an important role in physiological processes. HS is present in skeletal muscles but its detailed role in this tissue remains unclear.MethodsWe examined the role of HS in the differentiation of C2C12 cells, a mouse myoblast cell line. We also phenotyped the impact of HS deletion in mouse skeletal muscles on their functions by using Cre-loxP system.ResultsCRISPR-Cas9-dependent HS deletion or pharmacological removal of HS dramatically impaired myoblast differentiation of C2C12 cells. To confirm the importance of HS in vivo, we deleted Ext1, which encodes an enzyme essential for HS biosynthesis, specifically in the mouse skeletal muscles (referred to as mExt1CKO mice). Treadmill and wire hang tests demonstrated that mExt1CKO mice exhibited muscle weakness. The contraction of isolated soleus muscles from mExt1CKO mice was also impaired. Morphological examination of mExt1CKO muscle tissue under light and electron microscopes revealed smaller cross sectional areas and thinner myofibrils. Finally, a model of muscle regeneration following BaCl2 injection into the tibialis anterior muscle of mice demonstrated that mExt1CKO mice had reduced expression of myosin heavy chain and an increased number of centronucleated cells. This indicates that muscle regeneration after injury was attenuated in the absence of HS expression in muscle cells.SignificanceThese results demonstrate that HS plays an important role in skeletal muscle function by promoting differentiation.  相似文献   

3.
Heparan sulfate (HS) regulates the activity of many signaling molecules critical for the development of endochondral bones. Even so, mice with a genetically altered HS metabolism display a relatively mild skeletal phenotype compared to the defects observed in other tissues and organs pointing to a reduced HS dependency of growth-factor signaling in chondrocytes. To understand this difference, we have investigated the glycosaminoglycan (GAG) composition in two mouse lines that produce either reduced levels of HS (Ext1gt/gt mice) or HS lacking 2-O-sulfation (Hs2st1−/− mice). Analysis by RPIP-HPLC revealed an increased level of sulfated disaccarides not affected by the mutation in both mouse lines indicating that chondrocytes attempt to restore a critical level of sulfation. In addition, in both mutant lines we also detected significantly elevated levels of CS. Size exclusion chromatography further demonstrated that Ext1gt/gt mutants produce more but shorter CS chains, while the CS chains produced by (Hs2st1−/− mice) mutants are of similar length to that of wild type littermates indicating that chondrocytes produce more rather than longer CS chains. Expression analysis revealed an upregulation of aggrecan, which likely carries most of the additionally produced CS. Together the results of this study demonstrate for the first time that not only a reduced HS synthesis but also an altered HS structure leads to increased levels of CS in mammalian tissues. Furthermore, as chondrocytes produce 100-fold more CS than HS the increased CS levels point to an active, precursor-independent mechanism that senses the quality of HS in a vast excess of CS. Interestingly, reducing the level of cell surface CS by chondroitinase treatment leads to reduced Bmp2 induced Smad1/5/9 phosphorylation. In addition, Erk phosphorylation is increased independent of Fgf18 treatment indicating that both, HS and CS, affect growth factor signaling in chondrocytes in distinct manners.  相似文献   

4.
Heparan sulfate (HS) is a linear carbohydrate composed of polymerized uronate-glucosamine disaccharide units that decorates cell surface and secreted glycoproteins in the extracellular matrix. In mammals HS is subjected to differential sulfation by fifteen different heparan sulfotransferase (HST) enzymes of which Hs2st uniquely catalyzes the sulfation of the 2-O position of the uronate in HS. HS sulfation is postulated to be important for regulation of signaling pathways by facilitating the interaction of HS with signaling proteins including those of the Fibroblast Growth Factor (Fgf) family which signal through phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated kinases Erk1/2. In the developing mouse telencephalon Fgf2 signaling regulates proliferation and neurogenesis. Loss of Hs2st function phenocopies the thinned cerebral cortex of mutant mice in which Fgf2 or Erk1/2 function are abrogated, suggesting the hypothesis that 2-O-sulfated HS structures play a specific role in Fgf2/Erk signaling pathway in this context in vivo. This study investigated the molecular role of 2-O sulfation in Fgf2/Erk signaling in the developing telencephalic midline midway through mouse embryogenesis at E12.5. We examined the expression of Hs2st, Fgf2, and Erk1/2 activity in wild-type and Hs2st-/- mice. We found that Hs2st is expressed at high levels at the midline correlating with high levels of Erk1/2 activation and Erk1/2 activation was drastically reduced in the Hs2st-/- mutant at the rostral telencephalic midline. We also found that 2-O sulfation is specifically required for the binding of Fgf2 protein to Fgfr1, its major cell-surface receptor at the rostral telencephalic midline. We conclude that 2-O sulfated HS structures generated by Hs2st are needed to form productive signaling complexes between HS, Fgf2 and Fgfr1 that activate Erk1/2 at the midline. Overall, our data suggest the interesting possibility that differential expression of Hs2st targets the rostral telencephalic midline for high levels of Erk signaling by increasing the sensitivity of cells to an Fgf2 signal that is rather more widespread.  相似文献   

5.
In vivo studies concerning the function of human hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) are limited by relatively low levels of engraftment and the failure of the engrafted HSC preparations to differentiate into functional immune cells after systemic application. In the present paper we describe the effect of intrahepatically transplanted CD34+ cells from cord blood into the liver of newborn or adult NOD/SCID mice on organ engraftment and differentiation.Analyzing the short and long term time dependency of human cell recruitment into mouse organs after cell transplantation in the liver of newborn and adult NOD/SCID mice by RT-PCR and FACS analysis, a significantly high engraftment was found after transplantation into liver of newborn NOD/SCID mice compared to adult mice, with the highest level of 35% human cells in bone marrow and 4.9% human cells in spleen at day 70. These human cells showed CD19 B-cell, CD34 and CD38 hematopoietic and CD33 myeloid cell differentiation, but lacked any T-cell differentiation. HSC transplantation into liver of adult NOD/SCID mice resulted in minor recruitment of human cells from mouse liver to other mouse organs. The results indicate the usefulness of the intrahepatic application route into the liver of newborn NOD/SCID mice for the investigation of hematopoietic differentiation potential of CD34+ cord blood stem cell preparations.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Heparan sulphate 2-O-sulphotransferase (Hs2st) acts at an intermediate stage in the pathway of biosynthesis of heparan sulphate (HS), catalysing the transfer of sulphate from 3-phosphoadenosine-5-phosphosulfate (PAPS) to the C2-position of selected hexuronic acid residues within the maturing HS chain. It is well established that 2-O-sulphation within HS, particularly of iduronate residues, is essential for HS to participate in a variety of high-affinity ligand-binding interactions. HS plays a central role in embryonic development and cellular function, modulating the activities of an extensive range of growth factors. Interestingly, in contrast to the early failure of embryos entirely lacking HS, Hs2st –/– mice survive until birth, but die perinatally due to a complete failure of kidney formation. The phenotype of Hs2st –/– mutant kidneys suggests that signalling between two tissues, ureteric bud and metanephric mesenchyme, is disrupted. We discuss candidate signalling molecules that may mediate this interaction. The HS generated by these mice lacks 2-O-sulphate groups but is extensively modified above wild type levels by O-sulphation at C-6 of glucosamine-N-sulfate (GlcNS) residues. We will discuss the potentially altered role of this atypical HS in growth factor signalling. Published in 2003.  相似文献   

8.
Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) mutants defective for envelope glycoprotein C (gC) and gB are highly impaired in the ability to attach to cell surface heparan sulfate (HS) moieties of proteoglycans, the initial virus receptor. Here we report studies aimed at defining the HS binding element of HSV-1 (strain KOS) gB and determining whether this structure is functionally independent of gB’s role in extracellular virus penetration or intercellular virus spread. A mutant form of gB deleted for a putative HS binding lysine-rich (pK) sequence (residues 68 to 76) was transiently expressed in Vero cells and shown to be processed normally, leading to exposure on the cell surface. Solubilized gBpK also had substantially lower affinity for heparin-acrylic beads than did wild-type gB, confirming that the HS binding domain had been inactivated. The gBpK gene was used to rescue a KOS gB null mutant virus to produce the replication-competent mutant KgBpK. Compared with wild-type virus, KgBpK showed reduced binding to mouse L cells (ca. 20%), while a gC null mutant virus in which the gC coding sequence was replaced by the lacZ gene (KCZ) was substantially more impaired (ca. 65%-reduced binding), indicating that the contribution of gC to HS binding was greater than that of gB. The effect of combining both mutations into a single virus (KgBpKgC) was additive (ca. 80%-reduced binding to HS) and displayed a binding activity similar to that observed for KOS virus attachment to sog9 cells, a glycosaminoglycan-deficient L-cell line. Cell-adsorbed individual and double HS mutant viruses exhibited a lower rate of virus entry following attachment, suggesting that HS binding plays a role in the process of virus penetration. Moreover, the KgBpK mutant virus produced small plaques on Vero cells in the presence of neutralizing antibody where plaque formation depended on cell-to-cell virus spread. These studies permitted the following conclusions: (i) the pK sequence is not essential for gB processing or function in virus infection, (ii) the lysine-rich sequence of gB is responsible for HS binding, and (iii) binding to HS is cooperatively linked to the process of efficient virus entry and lateral spread but is not absolutely required for virus infectivity.  相似文献   

9.
The assessment of liver lipid content and composition is needed in preclinical research to investigate steatosis and steatosis-related disorders. The purpose of this study was to quantify in vivo hepatic fatty acid content and composition using a method based on short echo time proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) at 7 Tesla. A mouse model of glycogen storage disease type 1a with inducible liver-specific deletion of the glucose-6-phosphatase gene (L-G6pc−/−) mice and control mice were fed a standard diet or a high-fat/high-sucrose (HF/HS) diet for 9 months. In control mice, hepatic lipid content was found significantly higher with the HF/HS diet than with the standard diet. As expected, hepatic lipid content was already elevated in L-G6pc−/− mice fed a standard diet compared with control mice. L-G6pc−/− mice rapidly developed steatosis which was not modified by the HF/HS diet. On the standard diet, estimated amplitudes from olefinic protons were found significantly higher in L-G6pc−/− mice compared with that in control mice. L-G6pc−/− mice showed no noticeable polyunsaturation from diallylic protons. Total unsaturated fatty acid indexes measured by gas chromatography were in agreement with MRS measurements. These results showed the great potential of high magnetic field MRS to follow the diet impact and lipid alterations in mouse liver.  相似文献   

10.
Protective immune responses and the virulence of Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae (APP) have been attributed, in part, to toxins (Apx) produced by the bacterium. A mutant of the serovar 7 strain HS93 (HS93Tox), lacking the genes encoding the structural toxin ApxA and the post-translational activating protein ApxC, but retaining the genes required for secretion ApxB and ApxD, was isolated and shown to be attenuated in a mouse model. A plasmid vector system was developed and used to express the ApxA gene from within the HS93Tox strain. The resulting strain, HS93Tox/pIG-T1K, expresses the Apx structural protein in a non-activated form. HS93Tox/pIG-T1K was shown to be attenuated in a mouse model and to be capable of inducing Apx-specific antibodies, which were boosted on re-inoculation. Live vaccination of mice with HS93Tox/pIG-T1K offered protection against homologous wild-type serovar 7 challenge, and also heterologous challenge with a serovar 1 strain. This is in contrast to vaccination with the HS93Tox strain, which failed to protect mice against a heterologous challenge. Received: 13 April 1998 / Accepted: 16 June 1998  相似文献   

11.
Heparan sulfate (HS) is a structurally complex polysaccharide located on the cell surface and in the extracellular matrix, where it participates in numerous biological processes through interactions with a vast number of regulatory proteins such as growth factors and morphogens. HS is crucial for lung development; disruption of HS synthesis in flies and mice results in a major aberration of airway branching, and in mice, it results in neonatal death as a consequence of malformed lungs and respiratory distress. Epithelial–mesenchymal interactions governing lung morphogenesis are directed by various diffusible proteins, many of which bind to, and are regulated by HS, including fibroblast growth factors, sonic hedgehog, and bone morphogenetic proteins. The majority of research into the molecular mechanisms underlying defective lung morphogenesis and pulmonary pathologies, such as bronchopulmonary dysplasia and pulmonary hypoplasia associated with congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH), has focused on abnormal protein expression. The potential contribution of HS to abnormalities of lung development has yet to be explored to any significant extent, which is somewhat surprising given the abnormal lung phenotype exhibited by mutant mice synthesizing abnormal HS. This review summarizes our current understanding of the role of HS and HS‐binding proteins in lung morphogenesis and will present in vitro and in vivo evidence for the fundamental importance of HS in airway development. Finally, we will discuss the future possibility of HS‐based therapeutics for ameliorating insufficient lung growth associated with lung diseases such as CDH. Birth Defects Research (Part C) 90:32–44, 2010. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

12.
Exposure to 950 rads 60Co radiation has been reported to cause long-lasting damage to the hematopoietic stroma (HS), although the size of the CFUs population recovers to pre-irradiation levels. In these studies HS damage was detected only after subcutaneously implanting the femurs of the irradiated mice into syngeneic hosts. To exclude the possibility that what was considered to be HS damage was merely caused by artifacts due to the process of implantation in a new host, we compared the rate of regeneration of CFUs in mice which had recovered from 950 rads prior to receiving 300 rads 60Co radiation (950 + 300 rads group) with that of mice which received only 300 rads (0 + 300 rads group). The CFUs population in the 950 + 300 rads group grew exponentially for 2 weeks at a rate which did not differ significantly from that of CFUs in the 0 + 300 rads group. However, the rate of CFUs growth reached a plateau before full recovery was achieved in contrast to that in the 0 + 300 rads mice. We therefore conclude that the incomplete regeneration of CFUs in the marrows of 950 + 300 rads mice was most likely caused by X-irradiation-induced damage to the HS rather than damage to the inherent repopulating potential of the CFUs per se.  相似文献   

13.
The mechanisms that underlie the development of myocardial dysfunction after resuscitated hemorrhagic shock (HS) are not known. Recent studies suggest that systemic activation of inflammatory mediators may contribute to cellular dysfunction and/or cell death in various organs, including the heart. However, the precise role that inflammatory mediators play in the heart in the setting of resuscitated HS is not known. Accordingly, the purpose of the present study was to use a well-defined murine model of resuscitated HS to characterize the functional significance of inflammatory mediators in the heart in vivo. Mice were subjected to sham operation or resuscitated HS. Left ventricular (LV) function was assessed by two-dimensional echocardiography 6 h after resuscitation. Myocardial TNF, IL-1beta, and IL-6 proteins were measured 1 and 6 h after resuscitation. To determine the role of TNF in HS-induced LV dysfunction, mice were treated with a soluble TNF receptor antagonist (etanercept) before HS or at the time of resuscitation. LV fractional shortening was significantly depressed (P < 0.05) in resuscitated HS mice (28 +/- 1.5%) compared with sham controls (35.8 +/- 1.0%). TNF and IL-1beta levels were significantly increased (P < 0.05) in resuscitated HS mice. Pretreatment with etanercept abrogated resuscitated HS-induced LV dysfunction, whereas treatment at the time of resuscitation significantly attenuated, but did not abrogate, LV dysfunction. Together, these data suggest that TNF plays a critical upstream role in resuscitated HS-induced LV dysfunction; however, once the deleterious consequences of reperfusion injury are initiated, TNF contributes to, but is not necessary for, the development of LV dysfunction.  相似文献   

14.
Studies on glycosaminoglycans and proteoglycans (PGs) have been hampered by difficulties in isolation and analysis by traditional methods that are laborious and lack sensitivity and throughput. Here we demonstrate a simple method for rapid isolation of proteoglycans (RIP) employing phenol/guanidine/chloroform reagent to purify heparan sulfate (HS) PGs quantitatively from various tissues and cells. We further show that this generic purification methodology, when applied in concert with a BODIPYTM fluorescent label, permits structural analyses on RIP-purified HS at ∼1,000-fold higher sensitivity than standard UV detection methods and ∼10–100-fold higher sensitivity than previous fluorescence detection methods. The utility of RIP-BODIPY methodology was demonstrated by rapid profiling of HS structural composition from small tissue samples, multiple mouse organs, and as little as a few thousand cultured cells. It was also used to generate novel insights into in vivo structural changes in HS from Sulf1 knock-out mice for the first time that differed significantly from previous observations limited to tissue culture experiments. RIP was also applied to purify HS for bioassay testing, exemplified by cell assays of fibroblast growth factor signaling activation; this generated data from 2-O-sulfotransferase knock-out mice and revealed an unexpected deficiency in fibroblast growth factor activation by HS from heterozygous mice. These data demonstrate that RIP will underpin emerging efforts to develop glycomics profiling strategies for HS and other glycosaminoglycans to explore their structure-function relationships in complex biological systems.Heparan sulfate (HS)3 is a member of the glycosaminoglycan (GAG) family of polysaccharides and is found on almost all cell types in metazoan organisms, attached to core proteins to form specialized glycoproteins called proteoglcans (PGs). It is critical in many biological processes (including embryonic development, homeostasis, and wound healing), and lack of HS is lethal in higher organisms such as mice (1, 2). HS is also involved in a variety of disease processes (such as tumor angiogenesis, pathogen adhesion, and neurodegeneration). It carries out these functions primarily by binding to many different proteins and regulating their functions (1, 3). Specific binding is in part determined by the variation in structure of the HS, primarily in the number and location of sulfate moieties (4, 5). There is now intense interest in identifying specific structural motifs within HS responsible for binding and regulation of particular proteins and in exploring the heparanome, the entire complements of HS structures expressed by cells and tissues (1, 3, 6).The study of HS biochemistry and its interactions with proteins (3, 4) necessitates the ability to purify and analyze HS from tissues and cells. However, current methods of purification (such as detergent and guanidium salt extraction followed by protease digestion or chloroform/methanol extraction), although good at purifying HS in large amounts from single sources, suffer several drawbacks. They are lengthy and laborious (involving complex extraction processes and multiple column chromatographic steps) and can also result in alteration of native structure, for example N-desulfation (710). To address these problems, our rationale was to devise a simple extraction and purification protocol that was both rapid and streamlined, minimizing transfers to reduce losses in yield and providing HS of sufficient purity for comparative structural and functional analysis. We observed that PGs partition exclusively in the aqueous phase in extractions performed with TRIzol® (a well known phenol/guanidine/chloroform reagent that is widely used to purify DNA and RNA from tissues) (11). This observation led us to develop a method for isolation of PGs, exemplified by HSPGs. Here we demonstrate a novel approach for the rapid isolation of proteoglycans (RIP) from most tissues and cell culture samples that is quick (from cell/tissue sample to ion exchange purification in ∼30 min), reduces loss of material (only one transfer before ion exchange step), and is readily scalable. Furthermore, when coupled to a recently developed method for highly sensitive fluorescent labeling of GAG saccharides with BODIPYTM hydrazide (12), RIP allows the structural profiling and bioassay of HS from less than a milligram of starting tissue or a few thousand cells.  相似文献   

15.
Heparan sulfate (HS) is a structurally complex polysaccharide that interacts with a broad spectrum of extracellular effector ligands and thereby is thought to regulate a diverse array of biologic processes. The specificity of HS-ligand interactions is determined by the arrangement of sulfate groups on HS, which creates distinct binding motifs. Biologically important HS motifs are expected to exhibit regulated expression, yet there is a profound lack of tools to identify such motifs; consequently, little is known of their structures and functions. We have identified a novel phage display-derived antibody (NS4F5) that recognizes a highly regulated HS motif (HSNS4F5), which we have rigorously identified as (GlcNS6S-IdoA2S)3. HSNS4F5 exhibits a restricted expression in healthy adult tissues. Blocking HSNS4F5 on cells in culture resulted in reduced proliferation and enhanced sensitivity to apoptosis. HSNS4F5 is up-regulated in tumor endothelial cells, consistent with a role in endothelial cell activation. Indeed, TNF-α stimulated endothelial expression of HSNS4F5, which contributed to leukocyte adhesion. In a mouse model of severe systemic amyloid protein A amyloidosis, HSNS4F5 was expressed within amyloid deposits, which were successfully detected by microSPECT imaging using NS4F5 as a molecularly targeted probe. Combined, our results demonstrate that NS4F5 is a powerful tool for elucidating the biological function of HSNS4F5 and can be exploited as a probe to detect novel polysaccharide biomarkers of disease processes.  相似文献   

16.
Angiogenesis is a hallmark of expanding tissue e.g. during embryogenesis and wound healing in physiology as well as in diseases such as cancer and atherosclerosis. Key steps of the angiogenic process involve growth factor-mediated stimulation of endothelial cell sprouting and tube formation. Heparan sulphate proteoglycans (HSPGs) have been implicated as important co-receptors of several pro-angiogenic proteins. The importance of HSPGs in physiology was underscored by the finding that knockout of the gene encoding HS polymerase, EXT-1, resulted in early embryonic lethality. Here, we describe the establishment of HS-deficient endothelial cells from sprouting aortas as well as from the lungs of EXT-1flox/flox mice. Recombination of the loxP-flanked EXT-1 locus by Cre-expressing adenovirus was demonstrated at the mRNA level. Moreover, depletion of HS polysaccharides was verified by flow cytometry and fluorescence microscopy methodology using phage display-derived anti-HS antibodies. In summary, we provide a genetic model to unravel the functional role of HSPGs specifically in primary endothelial cells during early steps of angiogenesis. Our studies are applicable to most loxP-based transgenic mouse strains, and may thus be of general importance in the angiogenesis field.  相似文献   

17.
A robust animal model for “hypothesis-testing/mechanistic” research in human immunology and immuno-pathology should meet the following criteria. First, it has well-studied hemato-lymphoid organs and target cells similar to those of humans. Second, the human pathogens establish infection and lead to relevant diseases. Third, it is genetically inbred and can be manipulated via genetic, immunological and pharmacological means. Many human-tropic pathogens such as HIV-1 fail to infect murine cells due to the blocks at multiple steps of their life cycle. The mouse with a reconstituted human immune system and other human target organs is a good candidate. A number of human-mouse chimeric models with human immune cells have been developed in the past 20 years, but most with only limited success due to the selective engraftment of xeno-reactive human T cells in hu-PBL-SCID mice or the lack of significant human immune responses in the SCID-hu Thy/Liv mouse. This review summarizes the current understanding of HIV-1 immuno-pathogenesis in human patients and in SIV-infected primate models. It also reviews the recent progress in the development of humanized mouse models with a functional human immune system, especially the recent progress in the immunodeficient mice that carry a defective gammaC gene. NOD/SCID/gammaC−/− (NOG or NSG) or the Rag2−/−gammaC−/− double knockout (DKO) mice, which lack NK as well as T and B cells (NTB-null mice), have been used to reconstitute a functional human immune system in central and peripheral lymphoid organs with human CD34+ HSC. These NTB-hu HSC humanized models have been used to investigate HIV-1 infection, immuno-pathogenesis and therapeutic interventions. Such models, with further improvements, will contribute to study human immunology, human-tropic pathogens as well as human stem cell biology in the tissue development and function in vivo.  相似文献   

18.
The process of regeneration is most readily studied in species of sponge, hydra, planarian, and salamander (i.e., newt and axolotl). The closure of MRL mouse ear pinna through-and-through holes provides a model of unusual wound healing/regeneration in which a blastema-like structure closes the ear hole and cartilage and hair follicles are replaced. Recent studies, based on a broad level of DNA damage and a cell cycle pattern of G2/M "arrest," showed that p21Cip1/Waf1 was missing from the MRL mouse ear and that a p21-null mouse could close its ear holes. Given the p53/p21 axis of control of DNA damage, cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, and senescence, we tested the role of p53 in the ear hole regenerative response. Using backcross mice, we found that loss of p53 in MRL mice did not show reduced healing. Furthermore, cross sections of MRL.p53-/- mouse ears at 6 weeks post-injury showed an increased level of adipocytes and chondrocytes in the region of healing whereas MRL or p21-/- mice show chondrogenesis alone in this same region, though at later time points. In addition, we also investigated other cell cycle-related mutant mice to determine how p21 was being regulated. We demonstrate that p16 and Gadd45 null mice show little healing capacity. Interestingly, a partial healing phenotype in mice with a dual Tgfb/Rag2 knockout mutation was seen. These data demonstrate an independence of p53 signaling for mouse appendage regeneration and suggest that the role of p21 in this process is possibly through the abrogation of the Tgfb/Smad pathway.  相似文献   

19.
Exposure to ethanol in man has been linked to an alteration of the immune surveillance system and reduced ability of the macrophage to undergo phagocytosis. Since ethanol has been suggested to alter membrane function and inhibit the production of calcium ionophore stimulated synthesis of prostaglandins and leukotrienes by the human neutrophil and transformed murine mast cell, the dose response effect of ethanol on the biosynthesis of icosanoids by the peritoneal macrophage during zymosan phagocytosis was studied. Peritoneal macrophages from two inbred strains of mice derived from a common stock (HS) and selected for sensitivity to ethanol (shoprt sleep [SS]/long sleep [LS]) were studies. Zymosan phagocytosis was found to lead to synthesis of LTC4 (70 ng/106 cells), 6-keto-PGF1a (5 ng/106 (3 ng/106 cells). For the HS macrophage, ethanol caused a dose dependent inhibition of these lipid mediators as well as inhibition of phagocytosis and release of beta-hexosaminidase. However, a difference was observed in arachidonate metabolism stimulated by phagocytosis between the LS and SS mice below 100 mM ethanol. The SS mouse had a 50% inhibition of cyclooxygenase products at 86 mM ethanol with no inhibition of lipoxygenase metabolites. The LS mice had a trend suggesting increased lipoxygenase metabolites below 100 mM ethanol. At these levels of ethanol which can be found in man, these results suggest there may be differential production of lipid mediators under genetic control.  相似文献   

20.
Mucopolysaccharidosis I Hurler (MPSI-H) is a pediatric lysosomal storage disease caused by genetic deficiencies in IDUA, coding for α-l-iduronidase. Idua−/− mice share similar clinical pathology with patients, including the accumulation of the undegraded glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) heparan sulfate (HS), and dermatan sulfate (DS), progressive neurodegeneration, and dysostosis multiplex. Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) is the most effective treatment for Hurler patients, but reduced intensity conditioning is a risk factor in transplantation, suggesting an underlying defect in hematopoietic cell engraftment. HS is a co-receptor in the CXCL12/CXCR4 axis of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell (HSPC) migration to the bone marrow (BM), but the effect of HS alterations on HSPC migration, or the functional role of HS in MPSI-H are unknown. We demonstrate defective WT HSPC engraftment and migration in Idua−/− recipient BM, particularly under reduced intensity conditioning. Both intra- but especially extracellular Idua−/− BM HS was significantly increased and abnormally sulfated. Soluble heparinase-sensitive GAGs from Idua−/− BM and specifically 2-O-sulfated HS, elevated in Idua−/− BM, both inhibited CXCL12-mediated WT HSPC transwell migration, while DS had no effect. Thus we have shown that excess overly sulfated extracellular HS binds, and sequesters CXCL12, limiting hematopoietic migration and providing a potential mechanism for the limited scope of HSCT in Hurler disease.  相似文献   

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