17 resultados para optical pupil filters with sine functions
Resumo:
Sphingosylphosphocholine (SPC) is the deacylated derivative of sphingomyelin known to accumulate in neuropathic Niemann-Pick disease type A. SPC is a potent mitogen that increases intracellular free Ca2+ and free arachidonate through pathways that are only partly protein kinase C-dependent. Here we show that SPC increased specific DNA-binding activity of transcription activator AP-1 in electrophoretic mobility-shift assays. Increased DNA-binding activity of AP-1 was detected after only 1-3 min, was maximal after 6 hr, and remained elevated at 12-24 hr. c-Fos was found to be a component of the AP-1 complex. Northern hybridization revealed an increase in c-fos transcripts after 30 min. Since the increase in AP-1 binding activity preceded the increase in c-fos mRNA, posttranslational modifications may be important in mediating the early SPC-induced increases in AP-1 DNA-binding activity. Western analysis detected increases in nuclear c-Jun and c-Fos proteins following SPC treatment. SPC also transactivated a reporter gene construct through the AP-1 recognition site, indicating that SPC can regulate the expression of target genes. Thus, SPC-induced cell proliferation may result from activation of AP-1, linking signal transduction by SPC to gene expression. Since the expression of many proteins with diverse functions is known to be regulated by AP-1, SPC-induced activation of AP-1 may contribute to the pathophysiology of Niemann-Pick disease.
Resumo:
By using an expression cloning strategy, we isolated a single positive clone encoding a tilapia prolactin (PRL) receptor. Tilapia PRL188 was used to screen a freshwater tilapia kidney expression library transfected in COS cells. The tilapia PRL receptor is a mature protein of 606 amino acids. The extracellular domain is devoid of the tandem repeat units present in birds and has two pairs of cysteine residues, a Trp-Ser-Xaa-Trp-Ser motif, and two potential N-glycosylation sites. The cytoplasmic domain contains 372 amino acids, including box 1, a sequence previously shown to be important for signal transduction in mammalian species. Thus, the general structure is similar to the long form of mammalian PRL receptors; however, amino acid comparisons reveal a rather low identity (approximately 37%). Northern blot analysis shows the existence of a single transcript in osmoregulatory tissues and reproductive organs. This localization is in agreement with known functions of PRL in teleosts.