首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
文章检索
  按 检索   检索词:      
出版年份:   被引次数:   他引次数: 提示:输入*表示无穷大
  收费全文   29篇
  免费   0篇
  2023年   1篇
  2020年   1篇
  2017年   1篇
  2016年   1篇
  2014年   2篇
  2013年   2篇
  2012年   3篇
  2011年   3篇
  2010年   4篇
  2009年   1篇
  2006年   3篇
  2004年   2篇
  2003年   1篇
  2002年   3篇
  2001年   1篇
排序方式: 共有29条查询结果,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
The heparan sulfate proteoglycan, glypican-1, is a low affinity receptor for fibroblast growth factor 2 (FGF2). Fibroblast growth factor 2 is a potent stimulator of skeletal muscle cell proliferation and an inhibitor of differentiation. Heparan sulfate proteoglycans like glypican-1 are required for FGF2 to transduce an intracellular signal. Understanding the role of glypican-1 in the regulation of FGF2-mediated signaling is important in furthering the understanding of the biological processes involved in muscle development and growth. In the current study, a turkey glypican-1 expression vector construct was transfected into turkey myogenic satellite cells resulting in the overexpression of glypican-1. The proliferation, differentiation, and responsiveness to FGF2 were measured in control and transfected cell cultures. The overexpression of glypican-1 in turkey myogenic satellite cells increased both satellite cell proliferation and FGF2 responsiveness, but decreased the rate of differentiation. The current data support glypican-1 modulation of both proliferation and differentiation through an FGF2-mediated pathway.  相似文献   
2.
Tumor markers are widely used in pathology not only for diagnostic purposes but also to assess the prognosis and to predict the treatment of the tumor. Because tumor marker levels may change over time, it is important to get a better understanding of the molecular changes during tumor progression. Occurrence of breast and ovarian cancer is high in older women. Common known risk factors of developing these cancers in addition to age are not having children or having children at a later age, the use of hormone replacement therapy, and mutations in certain genes. In addition, women with a history of breast cancer may also develop ovarian cancer. Here, the authors review the different tumor markers of breast and ovarian carcinoma and discuss the expression, mutations, and possible roles of cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans during tumorigenesis of these carcinomas. The focus is on two groups of proteoglycans, the transmembrane syndecans and the lipid-anchored glypicans. Both families of proteoglycans have been implicated in cellular responses to growth factors and morphogens, including many now associated with tumor progression.  相似文献   
3.

Background

The solid melanoma tumor consists of transformed melanoma cells, and the associated stromal cells including fibroblasts, endothelial cells, immune cells, as well as, soluble macro- and micro-molecules of the extracellular matrix (ECM) forming the complex network of the tumor microenvironment. Heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) are an important component of the melanoma tumor ECM. Importantly, there appears to be both a quantitative and a qualitative shift in the content of HSPGs, in parallel to the nevi–radial growth phase–vertical growth phase melanoma progression. Moreover, these changes in HSPG expression are correlated to modulations of key melanoma cell functions.

Scope of review

This review will critically discuss the roles of HSPGs/heparin in melanoma development and progression.

Major conclusions

We have correlated HSPGs' expression and distribution with melanoma cell signaling and functions as well as angiogenesis.

General significance

The current knowledge of HSPGs/heparin biology in melanoma provides a foundation we can utilize in the ongoing search for new approaches in designing anti-tumor therapy. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Matrix-mediated cell behaviour and properties.  相似文献   
4.
GPC‐1 (glypican‐1) is a cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycan that acts as a co‐receptor for heparin‐binding growth factors and members of the TGF‐β (transforming growth factor beta‐1) family. The function of cell‐surface proteoglycans in the reparative dentine process has been under investigation. Gpc‐1 was detected with similar frequency as tgf‐β1 in the cDNA library using mRNA from the odontoblast‐like cell‐enriched pulp of rat incisors. The aim of this study was to test our hypothesis that gpc‐1 may be related to reparative dentine formation. We examined the expression of this gene during the reparative dentine process, as well as the effect of gpc‐1 on odontoblast‐like cell differentiation using siRNA (small interfering RNA) to down‐regulate gpc‐1 expression. Immunohistological examination showed that GPC‐1 was expressed in pulp cells entrapped by fibrodentine and odontoblast‐like cells as well as TGF‐β1. The mRNAs for gpc‐1, ‐3 and ‐4, except for gpc‐2, were expressed during odontoblast‐like cell differentiation in pulp cells. The relative levels of gpc‐1 mRNA were increased prior to the differentiation stages and were decreased during the secretory and maturation stages of pulp cells. Down‐regulation of gpc‐1 expression resulted in a 3.9‐fold increase in tgf‐β1 expression in pulp cells and a 0.3‐fold decrease in dspp (dentine sialophosphoprotein) expression compared with control. These results suggested that gpc‐1 and tgfβ‐1 expression are necessary for the onset of differentiation, but should be down‐regulated before other molecules are implicated in the formation of reparative dentine. In conclusion, gpc‐1 expression in odontoblast‐like cells is associated with the early differentiation but not with the formation of reparative dentine.  相似文献   
5.
The type 1 Simpson-Golabi-Behmel overgrowth syndrome (SGBS1) is caused by loss-of-function mutations of the X-linked GPC3 gene encoding glypican-3, a cell-surface heparan sulfate proteoglycan that apparently plays a negative role in growth control by an unknown mechanism. Mice carrying a Gpc3 gene knockout exhibited several phenotypic features that resemble clinical hallmarks of SGBS1, including somatic overgrowth, renal dysplasia, accessory spleens, polydactyly, and placentomegaly. In Gpc3/DeltaH19 double mutants (lacking GPC3 and also carrying a deletion around the H19 gene region that causes bialellic expression of the closely linked Igf2 gene by imprint relaxation), the Gpc3-null phenotype was exacerbated, while additional SGBS1 features (omphalocele and skeletal defects) were manifested. However, results from a detailed comparative analysis of growth patterns in double mutants lacking GPC3 and also IGF2, IGF1, or the type 1 IGF receptor (IGF1R) provided conclusive genetic evidence inconsistent with the hypothesis that GPC3 acts as a growth suppressor by sequestering or downregulating an IGF ligand. Nevertheless, our data are compatible with a model positing that there is downstream convergence of the independent signaling pathways in which either IGFs or (indirectly) GPC3 participate.  相似文献   
6.
Mir717 (mmu-mir-717) was first reported in mouse and resides in the intron 3 of glypican 3 (Gpc3) gene. Our present study revealed that this microRNA (miRNA) gene is conserved among 26 mammalian species and harbors polymorphic sites within the mature seed region in mice. Our finding represents a rare four layer genomic overlap consisting of growth associated quantitative trait locus (QTL), body mass associated Gpc3 gene, highly conserved miRNA gene and mature miRNA seed single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) identified in the lean mouse strain 129/Sv. Additionally, genes potentially targeted by Mir717 include 91 genes associated with obesity and related phenotypes in mammals. Our analysis provides a basis for further experiments to causally connect the identified SNP and Mir717 gene itself to obesity regulation. Furthermore, our bioinformatics analysis now enables functional annotation of Mir717 orthologs in other species, thus determining the effect of its target genes on fat-related traits.  相似文献   
7.
The heparan sulfate proteoglycan glypican-1, the chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan phosphacan/RPTP (receptor protein-tyrosine phosphatase)-ζ/β and the extracellular matrix protein tenascin-C were all found to be expressed by neural stem cells and by neural cells derived from them. Expression of proteoglycans and tenascin-C increased after retinoic acid induction of SSEA1-positive ES (embryonic stem) cells to nestin-positive neural stem cells, and after neural differentiation, proteoglycans and tenascin-C are expressed by both neurons and astrocytes, where they surround cell bodies and processes and in certain cases show distinctive expression patterns. With the exception of tenascin-C (whose expression may decrease somewhat), expression levels do not change noticeably during the following 2 weeks in culture. The significant expression, by neural stem cells and neurons and astrocytes derived from them, of two major heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans of nervous tissue and of tenascin-C, a high-affinity ligand of phosphacan/RPTP-ζ/β, indicates that an understanding of their specific functional roles in stem cell neurobiology will be important for the therapeutic application of this new technology in facilitating nervous tissue repair and regeneration.  相似文献   
8.
Hepatocellular carcinoma is a common malignancy. The carcinoma cells express glypican‐3 (GPC‐3) on the cell membrane. GPC‐3 is also expressed in melanoma cells. Therefore, GPC‐3 might be a potential target for tumor imaging or therapy. Here, proteomic mass spectrometry was used to identify peptides that target GPC‐3‐expressing tumors. A mammalian expression vector expressing a FLAG‐GPC‐3 fusion protein was cloned for immunoprecipitation. With the use of liposomes, the vector was transfected into HepG2 (HepG2/FLAG‐GPC‐3) and HEK 293 cells, and the transfected cell lines were selected with geneticin. HepG2/FLAG‐GPC‐3 cells were used for immunoprecipitation of FLAG‐GPC‐3 fusion protein. Seven peptide candidates (L1–L7) were selected for GPC‐3‐targeting ligands by mass spectrometric analysis. The L5 peptide with 14 amino acids (Arg‐Leu‐Asn‐Val‐Gly‐Gly‐Thr‐Tyr‐Phe‐Leu‐Thr‐Thr‐Arg‐Gln) showed selective binding to the GPC‐3‐expressing tumor cells, as did a shortened L5 peptide (L5‐2) with seven amino acids (Tyr‐Phe‐Leu‐Thr‐Thr‐Arg‐Gln). These peptide ligands have potential as targeting moieties to GPC‐3‐expressing tumors for diagnostic and/or therapeutic purposes. Copyright © 2011 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   
9.
Frizzled and Smoothened are homologous seven-transmembrane proteins functioning in the Wnt and Hedgehog signaling pathways, respectively. They harbor an extracellular cysteine-rich domain (FZ-CRD), a mobile evolutionary unit that has been found in a number of other metazoan proteins and Frizzled-like proteins in Dictyostelium. Domains distantly related to FZ-CRDs, in Hedgehog-interacting proteins (HHIPs), folate receptors and riboflavin-binding proteins (FRBPs), and Niemann-Pick Type C1 proteins (NPC1s), referred to as HFN-CRDs, exhibit similar structures and disulfide connectivity patterns compared with FZ-CRDs. We used computational analyses to expand the homologous set of FZ-CRDs and HFN-CRDs, providing a better understanding of their evolution and classification. First, FZ-CRD-containing proteins with various domain compositions were identified in several major eukaryotic lineages including plants and Chromalveolata, revealing a wider phylogenetic distribution of FZ-CRDs than previously recognized. Second, two new and distinct groups of highly divergent FZ-CRDs were found by sensitive similarity searches. One of them is present in the calcium channel component Mid1 in fungi and the uncharacterized FAM155 proteins in metazoans. Members of the other new FZ-CRD group occur in the metazoan-specific RECK (reversion-inducing-cysteine-rich protein with Kazal motifs) proteins that are putative tumor suppressors acting as inhibitors of matrix metalloproteases. Finally, sequence and three-dimensional structural comparisons helped us uncover a divergent HFN-CRD in glypicans, which are important morphogen-binding heparan sulfate proteoglycans. Such a finding reinforces the evolutionary ties between the Wnt and Hedgehog signaling pathways and underscores the importance of gene duplications in creating essential signaling components in metazoan evolution.  相似文献   
10.
Glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored proteins (GPI-APs) contain a covalently linked GPI anchor located on outer cell membranes. GPI-APs are ubiquitously conserved from protozoa to vertebrates and are critical for physiological events such as development, immunity, and neurogenesis in vertebrates. Both membrane-anchored and soluble GPI-APs play a role in regulating their protein conformation and functional properties. Several pathways mediate the release of GPI-APs from the plasma membrane by vesiculation or cleavage. Phospholipases and putative substrate-specific GPI-AP-releasing enzymes, such as NOTUM, glycerophosphodiesterase 2, and angiotensin-converting enzyme, have been characterized in mammals. Here, the protein modifications resulting from the cleavage of the GPI anchor are discussed in the context of its physiological functions.  相似文献   
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号