30 resultados para Explants


Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) single-node explants undergoing in vitro tuberization produced detectable amounts of ethylene throughout tuber development, and the resulting microtubers were completely dormant (endodormant) for at least 12 to 15 weeks. The rate of ethylene production by tuberizing explants was highest during the initial 2 weeks of in vitro culture and declined thereafter. Continuous exposure of developing microtubers to the noncompetitive ethylene antagonist AgNO3 via the culture medium resulted in a dose-dependent increase in precocious sprouting. The effect of AgNO3 on the premature loss of microtuber endodormancy was observed after 3 weeks of culture. Similarly, continuous exposure of developing microtubers to the competitive ethylene antagonist 2,5-norbornadiene (NBD) at concentrations of 2 mL/L (gas phase) or greater also resulted in a dose-dependent increase in premature sprouting. Exogenous ethylene reversed this response and inhibited the precocious sprouting of NBD-treated microtubers. NBD treatment was effective only when it was begun within 7 d of the start of in vitro explant culture. These results indicate that endogenous ethylene is essential for the full expression of potato microtuber endodormancy, and that its involvement may be restricted to the initial period of endodormancy development.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Class I isoforms of β-1,3-glucanases (βGLU I) and chitinases (CHN I) are antifungal, vacuolar proteins implicated in plant defense. Tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) βGLU I and CHN I usually exhibit tightly coordinated developmental, hormonal, and pathogenesis-related regulation. Both enzymes are induced in cultured cells and tissues of cultivar Havana 425 tobacco by ethylene and are down-regulated by combinations of the growth hormones auxin and cytokinin. We report a novel pattern of βGLU I and CHN I regulation in cultivar Havana 425 tobacco pith-cell suspensions and cultured leaf explants. Abscisic acid (ABA) at a concentration of 10 μm markedly inhibited the induction of βGLU I but not of CHN I. RNA-blot hybridization and immunoblot analysis showed that only class I isoforms of βGLU and CHN are induced in cell culture and that ABA inhibits steady-state βGLU I mRNA accumulation. Comparable inhibition of β-glucuronidase expression by ABA was observed for cells transformed with a tobacco βGLU I gene promoter/β-glucuronidase reporter gene fusion. Taken together, the results strongly suggest that ABA down-regulates transcription of βGLU I genes. This raises the possibility that some of the ABA effects on plant-defense responses might involve βGLU I.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The interactions between the plant hormones auxin and cytokinin throughout plant development are complex, and genetic investigations of the interdependency of auxin and cytokinin signaling have been limited. We have characterized the cytokinin sensitivity of the auxin-resistant diageotropica (dgt) mutant of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) in a range of auxin- and cytokinin-regulated responses. Intact, etiolated dgt seedlings showed cross-resistance to cytokinin with respect to root elongation, but cytokinin effects on hypocotyl growth and ethylene synthesis in these seedlings were not impaired by the dgt mutation. Seven-week-old, green wild-type and dgt plants were also equally sensitive to cytokinin with respect to shoot growth and hypocotyl and internode elongation. The effects of cytokinin and the dgt mutation on these processes appeared additive. In tissue culture organ regeneration from dgt hypocotyl explants showed reduced sensitivity to auxin but normal sensitivity to cytokinin, and the effects of cytokinin and the mutation were again additive. However, although callus induction from dgt hypocotyl explants required auxin and cytokinin, dgt calli did not show the typical concentration-dependent stimulation of growth by either auxin or cytokinin observed in wild-type calli. Cross-resistance of the dgt mutant to cytokinin thus was found to be limited to a small subset of auxin- and cytokinin-regulated growth processes affected by the dgt mutation, indicating that auxin and cytokinin regulate plant growth through both shared and separate signaling pathways.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The biological activity of reducing-end-modified oligogalacturonides was quantified in four tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) tissue culture bioassays. The derivatives used were oligogalacturonides with the C-1 of their reducing end (a) covalently linked to a biotin hydrazide, (b) covalently linked to tyramine, (c) chemically reduced to a primary alcohol, or (d) enzymatically oxidized to a carboxylic acid. These derivatives were tested for their ability to (a) alter morphogenesis of N. tabacum cv Samsun thin cell-layer explants, (b) elicit extracellular alkalinization by suspension-cultured cv Samsun cells, (c) elicit extracellular alkalinization by suspension-cultured N. tabacum cv Xanthi cells, and (d) elicit H2O2 accumulation in the cv Xanthi cells. In all four bioassays, each of the derivatives had reduced biological activity compared with the corresponding underivatized oligogalacturonides, demonstrating that the reducing end is a key element for the recognition of oligogalacturonides in these systems. However, the degree of reduction in biological activity depends on the tissue culture system used and on the nature of the specific reducing-end modification. These results suggest that oligogalacturonides are perceived differently in each tissue culture system.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Abscission explants of bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) were treated with ethylene to induce cell separation at the primary abscission zone. After several days of further incubation of the remaining petiole in endogenously produced ethylene, the distal two-thirds of the petiole became senescent, and the remaining (proximal) portion stayed green. Cell-to-cell separation (secondary abscission) takes place precisely at the interface between the senescing yellow and the enlarging green cells. The expression of the abscission-associated isoform of β-1,4-glucanhydrolase, the activation of the Golgi apparatus, and enhanced vesicle formation occurred only in the enlarging cortical cells on the green side. These changes were indistinguishable from those that occur in normal abscission cells and confirm the conversion of the cortical cells to abscission-type cells. Secondary abscission cells were also induced by applying auxin to the exposed primary abscission surface after the pulvinus was shed, provided ethylene was added. Then, the orientation of development of green and yellow tissue was reversed; the distal tissue remained green and the proximal tissue yellowed. Nevertheless, separation still occurred at the junction between green and yellow cells and, again, it was one to two cell layers of the green side that enlarged and separated from their senescing neighbors. Evaluation of Feulgen-stained tissue establishes that, although nuclear changes occur, the conversion of the cortical cell to an abscission zone cell is a true transdifferentiation event, occurring in the absence of cell division.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The mechanisms underlying the menstrual lysis leading to shedding of the human endometrium and its accompanying bleeding are still largely unknown. In particular, whether breakdown of the endometrial fibrillar extra-cellular matrix that precedes bleeding depends on aspartic-, cysteine-, serine-, or metalloproteinases remains unclear. In the present study, menstrual regression of the human endometrium was mimicked in organ culture. Whereas sex steroids could preserve tissue integrity only in nonperimenstrual explants, matrix breakdown upon sex steroid deprivation was completely and reversibly inhibited at all stages of the menstrual cycle by specific inhibitors of matrix metalloproteinases, but not by inhibitors of the other classes of proteinases. Matrix metalloproteinases are thus identified as the key class of proteinases involved in the initiation of menstruation.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The differentiation of small intestinal epithelial cells may require stimulation by microenvironmental factors in vivo. In this study, the effects of mesenchymal and luminal elements in nonmalignant epithelia] cells isolated from the human fetus were studied in vitro. Enterocytes from the human fetus were cultured and microenvironmental factors were added in stages, each stage more closely approximating the microenvironment in vivo. Four stages were examined: epithelial cells derived on plastic from intestinal culture and grown as a cell clone, the same cells grown on connective tissue support, primary epithelial explants grown on fibroblasts with a laminin base, and primary epithelial explants grown on fibroblasts and laminin with n-butyrate added to the incubation medium. The epithelial cell clone dedifferentiated when grown on plastic; however, the cells expressed cytokeratins and villin as evidence of their epithelial cell origin. Human connective tissue matrix from Engelbreth-Holm-Swarm sarcoma cells (Matrigel) modulated their phenotype: alkaline phosphatase activity increased, microvilli developed on their apical surface, and the profile of insulin-like growth factor binding proteins resembled that secreted by differentiated enterocytes. Epithelial cells taken directly from the human fetus as primary cultures and grown as explants on fibroblasts and laminin expressed greater specific enzyme activities in brush border membrane fractions than the cell clone. These activities were enhanced by the luminal molecule sodium butyrate. Thus the sequential addition of connective tissue and luminal molecules to nonmalignant epithelia] cells in vitro induces a spectrum of changes in the epithelial cell phenotype toward full differentiation.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Bone morphogenetic protein 4 (BMP-4) induces ventral mesoderm but represses dorsal mesoderm formation in Xenopus embryos. We show that BMP-4 inhibits two signaling pathways regulating dorsal mesoderm formation, the induction of dorsal mesoderm (Spemann organizer) and the dorsalization of ventral mesoderm. Ectopic expression of BMP-4 RNA reduces goosecoid and forkhead-1 transcription in whole embryos and in activin-treated animal cap explants. Embryos and animal caps overexpressing BMP-4 transcribe high levels of genes expressed in ventral mesoderm (Xbra, Xwnt-8, Xpo, Mix.1, XMyoD). The Spemann organizer is ventralized in these embryos; abnormally high levels of Xwnt-8 mRNA and low levels of goosecoid mRNA are detected in the organizer. In addition, the organizer loses the ability to dorsalize neighboring ventral marginal zone to muscle. Overexpression of BMP-4 in ventral mesoderm inhibits its response to dorsalization signals. Ventral marginal zone explants ectopically expressing BMP-4 form less muscle when treated with soluble noggin protein or when juxtaposed to a normal Spemann organizer in comparison to control explants. Endogenous BMP-4 transcripts are downregulated in ventral marginal zone explants dorsalized by noggin, in contrast to untreated explants. Thus, while BMP-4 inhibits noggin protein activity, noggin downregulates BMP-4 expression by dorsalizing ventral marginal zone to muscle. Noggin and BMP-4 activities may control the lateral extent of dorsalization within the marginal zone. Competition between these two molecules may determine the final degree of muscle formation in the marginal zone, thus defining the border between dorsolateral and ventral mesoderm.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Expression of human keratinocyte growth factor (KGF/FGF-7) was directed to epithelial cells of the developing embryonic lung of transgenic mice disrupting normal pulmonary morphogenesis during the pseudoglandular stage of development. By embryonic day 15.5(E15.5), lungs of transgenic surfactant protein C (SP-C)-KGF mice resembled those of humans with pulmonary cystadenoma. Lungs were cystic, filling the thoracic cavity, and were composed of numerous dilated saccules lined with glycogen-containing columnar epithelial cells. The normal distribution of SP-C proprotein in the distal regions of respiratory tubules was disrupted. Columnar epithelial cells lining the papillary structures stained variably and weakly for this distal respiratory cell marker. Mesenchymal components were preserved in the transgenic mouse lungs, yet the architectural relationship of the epithelium to the mesenchyme was altered. SP-C-KGF transgenic mice failed to survive gestation to term, dying before E17.5. Culturing mouse fetal lung explants in the presence of recombinant human KGF also disrupted branching morphogenesis and resulted in similar cystic malformation of the lung. Thus, it appears that precise temporal and spatial expression of KGF is likely to play a crucial role in the control of branching morphogenesis during fetal lung development.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Previous research indicates that norepinephrine and dopamine stimulate release of luteinizing hormone (LH)-releasing hormone (LHRH), which then reaches the adenohypophysis via the hypophyseal portal vessels to release LH. Norepinephrine exerts its effect via alpha 1-adrenergic receptors, which stimulate the release of nitric oxide (NO) from nitricoxidergic (NOergic) neurons in the medial basal hypothalamus (MBH). The NO activates guanylate cyclase and cyclooxygenase, thereby inducing release of LHRH into the hypophyseal portal vessels. We tested the hypothesis that these two catecholamines modulate NO release by local feedback. MBH explants were incubated in the presence of sodium nitroprusside (NP), a releaser of NO, and the effect on release of catecholamines was determined. NP inhibited release of norepinephrine. Basal release was increased by incubation of the tissue with the NO scavenger hemoglobin (20 micrograms/ml). Hemoglobin also blocked the inhibitory effect of NP. In the presence of high-potassium (40 mM) medium to depolarize cell membranes, norepinephrine release was increased by a factor of 3, and this was significantly inhibited by NP. Hemoglobin again produced a further increase in norepinephrine release and also blocked the action of NP. When constitutive NO synthase was inhibited by the competitive inhibitor NG-monomethyl-L-arginine (NMMA) at 300 microM, basal release of norepinephrine was increased, as was potassium-evoked release, and this was associated in the latter instance with a decrease in tissue concentration, presumably because synthesis did not keep up with the increased release in the presence of NMMA. The results were very similar with dopamine, except that reduction of potassium-evoked dopamine release by NP was not significant. However, the increase following incubation with hemoglobin was significant, and hemoglobin, when incubated with NP, caused a significant elevation in dopamine release above that with NP alone. In this case, NP increased tissue concentration of dopamine along with inhibiting release, suggesting that synthesis continued, thereby raising the tissue concentration in the face of diminished release. When the tissue was incubated with NP plus hemoglobin, which caused an increase in release above that obtained with NP alone, the tissue concentration decreased significantly compared with that in the absence of hemoglobin, indicating that, with increased release, release exceeded synthesis, causing a fall in tissue concentration. When NO synthase was blocked by NMMA, the release of dopamine, under either basal or potassium-evoked conditions, was increased. Again, in the latter instance the tissue concentration declined significantly, presumably because synthesis did not match release. Therefore, the results were very similar with both catecholamines and indicate that NO acts to suppress release of both amines. Since both catecholamines activate the release of LHRH, the inhibition of their release by NO serves as an ultra-short-loop negative feedback by which NO inhibits the release of the catecholamines, thereby reducing the activation of the NOergic neurons and decreasing the release of LHRH. This may be an important means for terminating the pulses of release of LHRH, which generate the pulsatile release of LH that stimulates gonadal function in both male and female mammals.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The dorsoventral axis is established early in Xenopus development and may involve signaling by Wnts, a family of Wnt1-protooncogene-related proteins. The protein kinase shaggy functions in the wingless/Wnt signaling pathway, which operates during Drosophila development. To assess the role of a closely related kinase, glycogen synthase kinase 3 beta (GSK-3 beta), in vertebrate embryogenesis, we cloned a cDNA encoding a Xenopus homolog of GSK-3 beta (XGSK-3 beta). XGSK-3 beta-specific transcripts were detected by Northern analysis in Xenopus eggs and early embryos. Microinjection of the mRNA encoding a catalytically inactive form of rat GSK-3 beta into a ventrovegetal blastomere of eight-cell embryos caused ectopic formation of a secondary body axis containing a complete set of dorsal and anterior structures. Furthermore, in isolated ectodermal explants, the mutant GSK-3 beta mRNA activated the expression of neural tissue markers. Wild-type XGSK-3 beta mRNA suppressed the dorsalizing effects of both the mutated GSK-3 beta and Xenopus dishevelled, a proposed upstream signaling component of the same pathway. These results strongly suggest that XGSK-3 beta functions to inhibit dorsoventral axis formation in the embryo and provide evidence for conservation of the Wnt signaling pathway in Drosophila and vertebrates.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Serotonergic agents (uptake inhibitors, receptor ligands) cause significant craniofacial malformations in cultured mouse embryos suggesting that 5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin) (5-HT) may be an important regulator of craniofacial development. To determine whether serotonergic regulation of cell migration might underly some of these effects, cranial neural crest (NC) explants from embryonic day 9 (E9) (plug day = E1) mouse embryos or dissociated mandibular mesenchyme cells (derived from NC) from E12 embryos were placed in a modified Boyden chamber to measure effects of serotonergic agents on cell migration. A dose-dependent effect of 5-HT on the migration of highly motile cranial NC cells was demonstrated, such that low concentrations of 5-HT stimulated migration, whereas this effect was progressively lost as the dose of 5-HT was increased. In contrast, most concentrations of 5-HT inhibited migration of less motile, mandibular mesenchyme cells. To investigate the possible involvement of specific 5-HT receptors in the stimulation of NC migration, several 5-HT subtype-selective antagonists were used to block the effects of the most stimulatory dose of 5-HT (0.01 microM). Only NAN-190 (a 5-HT1A antagonist) inhibited the effect of 5-HT, suggesting involvement of this receptor. Further evidence was obtained by using immunohistochemistry with 5-HT receptor antibodies, which revealed expression of the 5-HT1A receptor but not other subtypes by migrating NC cells in both embryos and cranial NC explants. These results suggest that by activating appropriate receptors 5-HT may regulate migration of cranial NC cells and their mesenchymal derivatives in the mouse embryo.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

We have developed a paracrine signaling assay capable of mimicking inductive events in the early vertebrate embryo. RNA encoding one or more secreted proteins is microinjected into a Xenopus laevis oocyte. After a brief incubation to allow translation, a piece of embryonic tissue competent to respond to the signaling protein is grafted onto the oocyte. The secreted protein's effect on the grafted explant is then scored by assaying expression of tissue-specific markers. Explants of ectodermal tissue from blastula or gastrula stage embryos were grafted onto oocytes that had been injected with RNA encoding activin or noggin. We found that the paracrine assay faithfully reconstitutes mesoderm induction by activin and neural induction by noggin. Blastula-stage explants grafted onto activin-expressing oocytes expressed the mesodermal marker genes brachyury, goosecoid, and muscle actin. Gastrula-stage explants grafted onto noggin-expressing oocytes expressed neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) and formed cement gland. By injecting pools of RNA synthesized from a cDNA expression library into the oocyte, we also used the assay to screen for secreted neural-inducing proteins. We assayed 20,000 independent transformants of a library constructed from LiCl-dorsalized Xenopus laevis embryos, and we identified two cDNAs that induced neural tissue in ectodermal explants from gastrula-stage embryos. Both cDNAs encode noggin. These results suggest that the paracrine assay will be useful for the cloning of novel signaling proteins as well as for the analysis of known factors.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

It has previously been shown that alcohol can suppress reproduction in humans, monkeys, and small rodents by inhibiting release of luteinizing hormone (LH). The principal action is via suppression of the release of LH-releasing hormone (LHRH) both in vivo and in vitro. The present experiments were designed to determine the mechanism by which alcohol inhibits LHRH release. Previous research has indicated that the release of LHRH is controlled by nitric oxide (NO). The proposed pathway is via norepinephrine-induced release of NO from NOergic neurons, which then activates LHRH release. In the present experiments, we further evaluated the details of this mechanism in male rats by incubating medial basal hypothalamic (MBH) explants in vitro and examining the release of NO, prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), conversion of arachidonic acid to prostanoids, and production of cGMP. The results have provided further support for our theory of LHRH control. Norepinephrine increased the release of NO as measured by conversion of [14C]arginine to [14C]citrulline, and this increase was blocked by the alpha 1 receptor blocker prazosin. Furthermore, the release of LHRH induced by nitroprusside (NP), a donor of NO, is related to the activation of soluble guanylate cyclase by NO since NP increased cGMP release from MBHs and cGMP also released LHRH. Ethanol had no effect on the production of NO by MBH explants or the increased release of NO induced by norepinephrine. Therefore, it does not act at that step in the pathway. Ethanol also failed to affect the increase in cGMP induced by NP. On the other hand, as might be expected from previous experiments indicating that LHRH release was brought about by PGE2, NP increased the conversion of [14C]arachidonic acid to its metabolites, particularly PGE2. Ethanol completely blocked the release of LHRH induced by NP and the increase in PGE2 induced by NP. Therefore, the results support the theory that norepinephrine acts to stimulate NO release from NOergic neurons. This NO diffuses to the LHRH terminals where it activates guanylate cyclase, leading to an increase in cGMP. At the same time, it also activates cyclooxygenase. The increase in cGMP increases intracellular free calcium, activating phospholipase A2 to provide arachidonic acid, the substrate for conversion by the activated cyclooxygenase to PGE2, which then activates the release of LHRH. Since alcohol inhibits the conversion of labeled arachidonic acid to PGE2, it must act either directly to inhibit cyclooxygenase or perhaps it may act by blocking the increase in intracellular free calcium induced by cGMP, which is crucial for activation of of both phospholipase A2 and cyclooxygenase.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Nitric oxide synthase (NOS)-containing neurons, termed NOergic neurons, occur in various regions of the hypothalamus, including the median eminence-arcuate region, which plays an important role in controlling the release of luteinzing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH). We examined the effect of NO on release of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) from medial basal hypothalamic (MBH) explants incubated in vitro. Sodium nitroprusside (NP) (300 microM), a spontaneous releaser of NO, doubled the release of GABA. This release was significantly reduced by incubation of the tissue with hemoglobin, a scavenger of NO, whereas hemoglobin alone had no effect on the basal release of GABA. Elevation of the potassium concentration (40 mM) in the medium increased GABA release 15-fold; this release was further augmented by NP. Hemoglobin blocked the increase in GABA release induced by NP but had no effect on potassium-induced release, suggesting that the latter is not related to NO. As in the case of hemoglobin, NG-monomethyl-L-arginine (NMMA), a competitive inhibitor of NOS, had no effect on basal release of GABA, which indicates again that NO is not significant to basal GABA release. However, NMMA markedly inhibited the release of GABA induced by high potassium, which indicates that NO plays a role in potassium-induced release of GABA. In conditions in which the release of GABA was substantially augmented, there was a reduction in GABA tissue stores as well, suggesting that synthesis of GABA in these conditions did not keep up with release of the amine. Although NO released GABA, there was no effect of the released GABA on NO production, for incubation of MBH explants with GABA had no effect on NO release as measured by [14C]citrulline production. To determine whether GABA had any effect on the release of LHRH from these MBH explants, GABA was incubated with the tissue and the effect on LHRH release was determined. GABA (10(-5) or 10(-6) M) induced a 70% decrease in the release of LHRH, indicating that in the male rat GABA inhibits the release of this hypothalamic peptide. This inhibition in LHRH release induced by GABA was blocked by NMMA (300 microM), which indicates that GABA converts the stimulatory effect of NO on LHRH release into an inhibitory one, presumably via GABA receptors, which activate chloride channels that hyperpolarize the cell. Previous results have indicated that norepinephrine stimulates release of NO from the NOergic neurons, which then stimulates the release of LHRH. The current results indicate that the NO released also induces release of GABA, which then inhibits further LHRH release. Thus, in vivo the norepinephrinergic-driven pulses of LHRH release may be terminated by GABA released from GABAergic neurons via NO.