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201.
The zic1 gene is an activator of Wnt signaling   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The zic1 gene plays an important role in early patterning of the Xenopus neurectoderm. While Zic1 does not act as a neural inducer, it synergizes with the neural inducing factor Noggin to activate expression of posterior neural genes, including the midbrain/hindbrain boundary marker engrailed-2. Since the Drosophila homologue of zic1, odd-paired (opa), regulates expression of the wingless and engrailed genes and since Wnt proteins posteriorize neural tissue in Xenopus, we asked whether Xenopus Zic1 acted through the Wnt pathway. Using Wnt signaling inhibitors, we demonstrate that an active Wnt pathway is required for activation of en-2 expression by zic1. Consistent with this result, Zic1 induces expression of several wnt genes, including wnt1, wnt4 and wnt8b. wnt1 gene expression activates expression of engrailed in various organisms, including Xenopus, as demonstrated here. Together, our data suggest that zic1 is an upstream regulator of several wnt genes and that the regulatory relationships between opa, wingless and engrailed seen in Drosophila are also present in vertebrates.  相似文献   
202.
Talin is a key protein involved in linking integrins to the actin cytoskeleton. The long flexible talin rod domain contains a number of binding sites for vinculin, a cytoskeletal protein important in stabilizing integrin-mediated cell-matrix junctions. Here we report the solution structure of a talin rod polypeptide (residues 1843-1973) which contains a single vinculin binding site (VBS; residues 1944-1969). Like other talin rod polypeptides, it consists of a helical bundle, in this case a four-helix bundle with a right-handed topology. The residues in the VBS important for vinculin binding were identified by studying the binding of a series of VBS-related peptides to the vinculin Vd1 domain. The key binding determinants are buried in the interior of the helical bundle, suggesting that a substantial structural change in the talin polypeptide is required for vinculin binding. Direct evidence for this was obtained by NMR and EPR spectroscopy. [1H,15N]-HSQC spectra of the talin fragment indicate that vinculin binding caused approximately two-thirds of the protein to adopt a flexible random coil. For EPR spectroscopy, nitroxide spin labels were attached to the talin polypeptide via appropriately located cysteine residues. Measurements of inter-nitroxide distances in doubly spin-labeled protein showed clearly that the helical bundle is disrupted and the mobility of the helices, except for the VBS helix, is markedly increased. Binding of vinculin to talin is thus a clear example of the unusual phenomenon of protein unfolding being required for protein/protein interaction.  相似文献   
203.
The Integrated Exposure Uptake Biokinetic (IEUBK) model is frequently used to estimate blood lead concentrations of children exposed to lead. Simulations with the IEUBK model were run to estimate the blood lead concentration in children living in the vicinity of a non-ferrous plant, situated in Hoboken, Belgium. Concentrations in soil ranged from 59–2425 mg Pb/kg dm, average concentrations in house dust ranged from 234–73394 mg Pb/kg dm. Measured blood lead concentrations in children aged 2–7 years were between 3 and 35 μ g/dl. Exposure sources were indoor dust in the house and the school, outdoor dust and soil in the home surrounding and at the school's playground, and suspended dust in the air. Soil ingestion values and lead exposure from food were changed to Flemish values. The model was able to predict the measured blood lead concentrations adequately except for the lowest exposure group. Predictions showed a systematic overestimation. Analysis of the data revealed that the neighbourhood's school is an important source of exposure to lead; indoor house dust dominates exposure for children going to school outside the area, because of the high concentrations of lead in indoor dust (3 to 5 times higher than in outdoor soil).  相似文献   
204.
"Mitotic cell rounding" describes the rounding of mammalian cells before dividing into two daughter cells. This shape change requires coordinated cytoskeletal contraction and changes in osmotic pressure. While considerable research has been devoted to understanding mechanisms underlying cytoskeletal contraction, little is known about how osmotic gradients are involved in cell division. Here we describe cytoplasmic condensation preceding cell division, termed "premitotic condensation" (PMC), which involves cells extruding osmotically active Cl(-) via ClC-3, a voltage-gated channel/transporter. This leads to a decrease in cytoplasmic volume during mitotic cell rounding and cell division. Using a combination of time-lapse microscopy and biophysical measurements, we demonstrate that PMC involves the activation of ClC-3 by Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) in human glioma cells. Knockdown of endogenous ClC-3 protein expression eliminated CaMKII-dependent Cl(-) currents in dividing cells and impeded PMC. Thus, kinase-dependent changes in Cl(-) conductance contribute to an outward osmotic pressure in dividing cells, which facilitates cytoplasmic condensation preceding cell division.  相似文献   
205.
Worldwide, there has been much interest in the development and commercialization of human functional products from seaweeds. Novel seaweed compounds with potential applications as bioactive ingredients in natural health products are being isolated in a number of active research programs on this topic. The majority of these research programs do not include cultivation as a critically important component in scaling the discoveries up to commercialization (i.e., economies of scale realized). Many of these seaweeds of interest with potential as functional human products are diminutive in size, sparse in density, and seasonal in occurrence and bioactive efficacy, making commercialization by resource management and harvesting economically challenging and the application of traditional ocean-based production methods risky. Human functional products will require sustainable production coupled with quality assurance and standardized, consistent efficacy. Since humans are the consumers of these types of functional seaweed products, traceability and security of supply are of the utmost importance to successful commercialization. On-land cultivation is essential for commercial success in the development of human functional products from seaweeds at industrial scales. On-land cultivation allows the highest levels of control over quality, efficacy, traceability, and security. On-land cultivation represents the most environmentally acceptable method for the production of biomass from natural resources that could not be economically or sustainably developed any other way. However, on-land cultivation has many associated barriers to development, including high costs associated with capital, operations, maintenance, and cultivar development, and these demands limit industrial scale development of seaweed functional products for human consumption.  相似文献   
206.
Cadmium ions are notorious environmental pollutants. To adapt to cadmium-induced deleterious effects plants have developed sophisticated defense mechanisms. However, the signaling pathways underlying the plant response to cadmium are still elusive. Our data demonstrate that SnRK2s (for SNF1-related protein kinase2) are transiently activated during cadmium exposure and are involved in the regulation of plant response to this stress. Analysis of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) Osmotic Stress-Activated Protein Kinase activity in tobacco Bright Yellow 2 cells indicates that reactive oxygen species (ROS) and nitric oxide, produced mainly via an l-arginine-dependent process, contribute to the kinase activation in response to cadmium. SnRK2.4 is the closest homolog of tobacco Osmotic Stress-Activated Protein Kinase in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). Comparative analysis of seedling growth of snrk2.4 knockout mutants versus wild-type Arabidopsis suggests that SnRK2.4 is involved in the inhibition of root growth triggered by cadmium; the mutants were more tolerant to the stress. Measurements of the level of three major species of phytochelatins (PCs) in roots of plants exposed to Cd2+ showed a similar (PC2, PC4) or lower (PC3) concentration in snrk2.4 mutants in comparison to wild-type plants. These results indicate that the enhanced tolerance of the mutants does not result from a difference in the PCs level. Additionally, we have analyzed ROS accumulation in roots subjected to Cd2+ treatment. Our data show significantly lower Cd2+-induced ROS accumulation in the mutants’ roots. Concluding, the obtained results indicate that SnRK2s play a role in the regulation of plant tolerance to cadmium, most probably by controlling ROS accumulation triggered by cadmium ions.Cadmium is one of the most toxic soil pollutants. Cadmium ions accumulate in plants and affect, via the food chain, animal and human health. In plants, cadmium is taken up by roots and is transported to aerial organs, leading to chromosomal aberrations, growth reduction, and inhibition of photosynthesis, transpiration, nitrogen metabolism, nutrient and water uptake, eventually causing plant death (for review, see DalCorso et al., 2008). Plants are challenged not only by cadmium ions themselves, but also by Cd2+-induced harmful effects including oxidative stress (Schützendübel et al., 2001; Olmos et al., 2003; Cho and Seo, 2005; Sharma and Dietz, 2009). The extent of the detrimental effects on plant growth and metabolism depends on the level of cadmium ions present in the surrounding environment and on the plant’s sensitivity to heavy metal stress.Tolerant plants avoid heavy metal uptake and/or induce the expression of genes encoding products involved, directly or indirectly, in heavy metal binding and removal from potentially sensitive sites, by sequestration or efflux (Clemens, 2006). The best-characterized heavy metal binding ligands in plants are thiol-containing compounds metallothioneins and phytochelatins (PCs), whose production is stimulated by Cd2+. PCs bind metal ions and transport them to the vacuole, thus reducing the toxicity of the metal in the cytosol (for review, see Cobbett, 2000; Cobbett and Goldsbrough, 2002). PCs are synthesized from reduced glutathione (GSH). Therefore, production of compounds involved in cadmium detoxification and, at the same time, in cadmium tolerance closely depends on sulfur metabolism. So far, our knowledge on the cellular processes induced by cadmium that lead to changes in sulfur metabolism in plants has been rather limited.Protein kinases and phosphatases are considered major signal transduction elements. However, until now only a few of them have been described to be involved in cadmium stress response or sulfur metabolism. For instance, excessive amounts of cadmium or copper activate mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) in Medicago sativa (Jonak et al., 2004), rice (Oryza sativa; Yeh et al., 2007), and Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana; Liu et al., 2010). Studies on rice MAPKs involved in heavy metal stress response indicate that the activity of these kinases depends on the oxidative stress induced by Cd2+. Moreover, Yeh et al. (2007) suggested that the activation of MAPKs in rice by cadmium or copper required the activity of calcium-dependent protein kinase (CDPK) and PI3 kinase, since the MAPK pathways involved in cadmium and copper stress response could be inhibited by a CDPK antagonist (W7) or a PI3 kinase inhibitor (wortmannin). However, so far the function of the identified kinases in plant adaptation to heavy metal pollution has not been established. There is some information concerning an involvement of CDPK in sulfur metabolism (Liu et al., 2006). Soybean (Glycine max) Ser acetyltransferase (GmSerat2;1), the enzyme that catalyzes the first reaction in the biosynthesis of Cys from Ser, is phosphorylated by CDPK. The phosphorylation has no effect on GmSerat2;1 activity, but it renders the enzyme insensitive to the feedback inhibition by Cys (Liu et al., 2006). There is growing evidence that SnRK2s (for SNF1-related protein kinase2) play a role in the regulation of sulfur metabolism. Most information showing a connection between SnRK2s and sulfur metabolism comes from experiments on the lower plant Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (Davies et al., 1999; Irihimovitch and Stern, 2006; González-Ballester et al., 2008, 2010). SNRK2.1 is considered a general regulator of S-responsive gene expression in C. reinhardtii (González-Ballester et al., 2008).In higher plants the SnRK2 family members are known to be involved in plant response to drought, salinity, and in abscisic acid (ABA)-dependent plant development (Boudsocq and Laurière, 2005; Fujii et al., 2007, 2011; Fujii and Zhu, 2009; Fujita et al., 2009; Nakashima et al., 2009; Kulik et al., 2011). Ten members of the SnRK2 family have been identified in Arabidopsis and in rice (Boudsocq et al., 2004; Kobayashi et al., 2004). All of them, except SnRK2.9 from Arabidopsis, are rapidly activated by treatment with different osmolytes, such as Suc, mannitol, sorbitol, and NaCl, and some of them also by ABA. Results presented by Kimura et al. (2006) suggest that in Arabidopsis, similarly to C. reinhardtii, some SnRK2s are involved in the regulation of S-responsive gene expression and O-acetyl-l-Ser accumulation under limited sulfur supply, indicating that also higher plants’ SnRK2s could be involved in sulfur metabolism.As it was mentioned before, oxidative stress induced by cadmium ions significantly contributes to the metal toxicity. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) can be produced in many different reactions in various compartments of the cell in response to cadmium (Romero-Puertas et al., 2004; Heyno et al., 2008; Tamás et al., 2009). The best-characterized ROS-generating enzymes that take part in the response to cadmium are the plasma-membrane-bound NADPH oxidases (Olmos et al., 2003; Romero-Puertas et al., 2004; Garnier et al., 2006). There are some indications that plant NADPH oxidases are phosphorylated by SnRK2s (Sirichandra et al., 2009), therefore it is highly plausible that SnRK2s play a role in the regulation of ROS accumulation in plants subjected to cadmium stress. Taking into consideration all facts mentioned above we hypothesized that SnRK2s could be involved in the plant response to stress induced by cadmium ions. To verify this conjecture, we analyzed the activity and potential role of selected SnRK2s, in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) cells and Arabidopsis plants, in the response to cadmium ions.  相似文献   
207.
The risk of effects to fishes and other aquatic life from impulsive sound produced by activities such as pile driving and seismic exploration is increasing throughout the world, particularly with the increased exploitation of oceans for energy production. At the same time, there are few data that provide insight into the effects of these sounds on fishes. The goal of this study was to provide quantitative data to define the levels of impulsive sound that could result in the onset of barotrauma to fish. A High Intensity Controlled Impedance Fluid filled wave Tube was developed that enabled laboratory simulation of high-energy impulsive sound that were characteristic of aquatic far-field, plane-wave acoustic conditions. The sounds used were based upon the impulsive sounds generated by an impact hammer striking a steel shell pile. Neutrally buoyant juvenile Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) were exposed to impulsive sounds and subsequently evaluated for barotrauma injuries. Observed injuries ranged from mild hematomas at the lowest sound exposure levels to organ hemorrhage at the highest sound exposure levels. Frequency of observed injuries were used to compute a biological response weighted index (RWI) to evaluate the physiological impact of injuries at the different exposure levels. As single strike and cumulative sound exposure levels (SEL(ss), SEL(cum) respectively) increased, RWI values increased. Based on the results, tissue damage associated with adverse physiological costs occurred when the RWI was greater than 2. In terms of sound exposure levels a RWI of 2 was achieved for 1920 strikes by 177 dB re 1 μPa(2)?s SEL(ss) yielding a SEL(cum) of 210 dB re 1 μPa(2)?s, and for 960 strikes by 180 dB re 1 μPa(2)?s SEL(ss) yielding a SEL(cum) of 210 dB re 1 μPa(2)?s. These metrics define thresholds for onset of injury in juvenile Chinook salmon.  相似文献   
208.
Sonic hedgehog (SHH) is a regulator of forebrain development that acts through its receptor, patched 1. However, little is known about cellular mechanisms at neurulation, whereby SHH from the prechordal plate governs specification of the rostral diencephalon ventral midline (RDVM), a major forebrain organizer. We identified LRP2, a member of the LDL receptor gene family, as a component of the SHH signaling machinery in the RDVM. LRP2 acts as an apical SHH-binding protein that sequesters SHH in its target field and controls internalization and cellular trafficking of SHH/patched 1 complexes. Lack of LRP2 in mice and in cephalic explants results in failure to respond to SHH, despite functional expression of patched 1 and smoothened, whereas overexpression of LRP2 variants in cells increases SHH signaling capacity. Our data identify a critical role for LRP2 in SHH signaling and reveal the molecular mechanism underlying forebrain anomalies in mice and patients with Lrp2 defects.  相似文献   
209.
Peroxidasins represent the subfamily 2 of the peroxidase-cyclooxygenase superfamily and are closely related to chordata peroxidases (subfamily 1) and peroxinectins (subfamily 3). They are multidomain proteins containing a heme peroxidase domain with high homology to human lactoperoxidase that mediates one- and two-electron oxidation reactions. Additional domains of the secreted and glycosylated metalloproteins are type C-like immunoglobulin domains, typical leucine-rich repeats, as well as a von Willebrand factor C module. These are typical motifs of extracellular proteins that mediate protein-protein interactions. We have reconstructed the phylogeny of this new family of oxidoreductases and show the presence of four invertebrate clades as well as one vertebrate clade that includes also two different human representatives. The variability of domain assembly in the various clades was analyzed, as was the occurrence of relevant catalytic residues in the peroxidase domain based on the knowledge of catalysis of the mammalian homologues. Finally, the few reports on expression, localization, enzymatic activity, and physiological roles in the model organisms Drosophila melanogaster, Caenorhabditis elegans, and Homo sapiens are critically reviewed. Roles attributed to peroxidasins include antimicrobial defense, extracellular matrix formation, and consolidation at various developmental stages. Many research questions need to be solved in future, including detailed biochemical/physical studies and elucidation of the three dimensional structure of a model peroxidasin as well as the relation and interplay of the domains and the in vivo functions in various organisms including man.  相似文献   
210.
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