18 resultados para Biology, Molecular|Biology, Genetics|Biology, Virology


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Recent data suggest that the generation of new lymphatic vessels (i.e. lymphangiogenesis) may be a rate-limiting step in the dissemination of tumor cells to regional lymph nodes. However, efforts to study the cellular and molecular interactions that take place between tumor cells and lymphatic endothelial cells have been limited due to a lack of lymphatic endothelial cell lines available for study. ^ I have used a microsurgical approach to establish conditionally immortalized lymphatic endothelial cell lines from the afferent mesenteric lymphatic vessels of mice. Characterization of lymphatic endothelial cells, and tumor-associated lymphatic vessels revealed high expression levels of VCAM-1, which is known to facilitate adhesion of some tumor cells to vascular endothelial cells. Further investigation revealed that murine melanoma cells selected for high expression of α4, a counter-receptor for VCAM-1, demonstrated enhanced adhesion to lymphatic endothelial cells in vitro, and increased tumorigenicity and lymphatic metastasis in vivo, despite similar lymphatic vessel numbers. ^ Next, I examined the effects of growth factors that regulate lymphangiogenesis, and report that several growth factors are capable of activating survival and proliferation pathways of lymphatic endothelial cells. The dual protein tyrosine kinase inhibitor AEE788 (EGFR and VEGFR-2) inhibited the activation of Akt and MAPK in lymphatic endothelial cells responding to multiple growth factors. Moreover, oral treatment of mice with AEE788 decreased lymphatic vessel density and production of lymphatic metastasis by human colon cancer cells growing in the cecum of nude mice. ^ In the last set of experiments, I investigated the surgical management of lymphatic metastasis using a novel model of sentinel lymphadenectomy in live mice bearing subcutaneous B16-BL6 melanoma. The data demonstrate that this procedure when combined with wide excision of the primary melanoma, significantly enhanced survival of syngeneic C57BL/6 mice. ^ Collectively, these results indicate that the production of lymphatic metastasis depends on lymphangiogenesis, tumor cell adhesion to lymphatic endothelial cells, and proliferation of tumor cells in lymph nodes. Thus, lymphatic metastasis is a multi-step, complex, and active process that depends upon multiple interactions between tumor cells and tumor associated lymphatic endothelial cells. ^

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Chromatin, composed of repeating nucleosome units, is the genetic polymer of life. To aid in DNA compaction and organized storage, the double helix wraps around a core complex of histone proteins to form the nucleosome, and is therefore no longer freely accessible to cellular proteins for the processes of transcription, replication and DNA repair. Over the course of evolution, DNA-based applications have developed routes to access DNA bound up in chromatin, and further, have actually utilized the chromatin structure to create another level of complexity and information storage. The histone molecules that DNA surrounds have free-floating tails that extend out of the nucleosome. These tails are post-translationally modified to create docking sites for the proteins involved in transcription, replication and repair, thus providing one prominent way that specific genomic sequences are accessed and manipulated. Adding another degree of information storage, histone tail-modifications paint the genome in precise manners to influence a state of transcriptional activity or repression, to generate euchromatin, containing gene-dense regions, or heterochromatin, containing repeat sequences and low-density gene regions. The work presented here is the study of histone tail modifications, how they are written and how they are read, divided into two projects. Both begin with protein microarray experiments where we discover the protein domains that can bind modified histone tails, and how multiple tail modifications can influence this binding. Project one then looks deeper into the enzymes that lay down the tail modifications. Specifically, we studied histone-tail arginine methylation by PRMT6. We found that methylation of a specific histone residue by PRMT6, arginine 2 of H3, can antagonize the binding of protein domains to the H3 tail and therefore affect transcription of genes regulated by the H3-tail binding proteins. Project two focuses on a protein we identified to bind modified histone tails, PHF20, and was an endeavor to discover the biological role of this protein. Thus, in total, we are looking at a complete process: (1) histone tail modification by an enzyme (here, PRMT6), (2) how this and other modifications are bound by conserved protein domains, and (3) by using PHF20 as an example, the functional outcome of binding through investigating the biological role of a chromatin reader. ^

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Normal humans have one red and at least one green visual pigment genes. These genes are tightly linked as tandem repeats on the X chromosome and each of them has six exons. There is only one X-linked visual pigment gene in New World monkeys (NWMs) but the locus has three polymorphic alleles encoding red, yellow and green visual pigments, respectively. The spectral properties of the squirrel monkey and the marmoset (both NWMs) have been studied and partial sequences of the three alleles are available. To study the evolutionary history of these X-linked opsin genes in humans and NWMs, coding and intron sequences of the three squirrel monkey alleles and the three marmoset alleles were amplified by PCR followed by subcloning and sequencing. Introns 2 and 4 of the human red and green pigment genes were also sequenced. The results obtained are as follows: (1) The sequences of introns 2 and 4 of the human red and green opsin genes are significantly more similar between the two genes than are coding sequences, contrary to the usual situation where coding regions are better conserved in evolution than are introns. The high similarities in the two introns are probably due to recent gene conversion events during evolution of the human lineage. (2) Phylogenetic analysis of both intron and exon sequences indicates that the phylogenetic tree of the available primate opsin genes is the same as the species tree. The two human genes were derived from a gene duplication event after the divergence of the human and NWM lineages. The three alleles in each of the two NWM species diverged after the split of the two NWMs but have persisted in the population for at least 5 million years. (3) Allelic gene conversion might have occurred between the three squirrel monkey alleles. (4) A model of additive effect of hydroxyl-bearing amino acids on spectral tuning is proposed by treating some unknown variables as groups. Under the assumption that some residues have no effect, it is found that at least five amino acid residues, at positions 178 (3 nm), 180 (5 nm), 230 ($-$4 nm), 277 (9 nm) and 285 (13 nm), have linear spectral tuning effects. (5) Adaptive evolution of the opsin genes to different spectral peaks was observed at four residues that are important for spectral tuning. ^