979 resultados para Signal-transduction Pathway
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BACKGROUND: An important signal transduction pathway in plant defence depends on the accumulation of salicylic acid (SA). SA is produced in chloroplasts and the multidrug and toxin extrusion transporter ENHANCED DISEASE SUSCEPTIBILITY5 (EDS5; At4g39030) is necessary for the accumulation of SA after pathogen and abiotic stress. EDS5 is localized at the chloroplast and functions in transporting SA from the chloroplast to the cytoplasm. EDS5 has a homologue called EDS5H (EDS5 HOMOLOGUE; At2g21340) but its relationship to EDS5 has not been described and its function is not known. RESULTS: EDS5H exhibits about 72% similarity and 59% identity to EDS5. In contrast to EDS5 that is induced after pathogen inoculation, EDS5H was constitutively expressed in all green tissues, independently of pathogen infection. Both transporters are located at the envelope of the chloroplast, the compartment of SA biosynthesis. EDS5H is not involved with the accumulation of SA after inoculation with a pathogen or exposure to UV stress. A phylogenetic analysis supports the hypothesis that EDS5H may be an H(+)/organic acid antiporter like EDS5. CONCLUSIONS: The data based on genetic and molecular studies indicate that EDS5H despite its homology to EDS5 does not contribute to pathogen-induced SA accumulation like EDS5. EDS5H most likely transports related substances such as for example phenolic acids, but unlikely SA.
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Insulin stimulates the tyrosine kinase activity of its receptor resulting in the phosphorylation of its cytosolic substrate, insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1) which, in turn, associates with proteins containing SH2 domains. It has been shown that IRS-1 associates with the tyrosine phosphatase SHPTP2 in cell cultures. While the effect of the IRS-1/SHPTP2 association on insulin signal transduction is not completely known, this association may dephosphorylate IRS-1 and may play a critical role in the mitogenic actions of insulin. However, there is no physiological demonstration of this pathway of insulin action in animal tissues. In the present study we investigated the ability of insulin to induce association between IRS-1 and SHPTP2 in liver and muscle of intact rats, by co-immunoprecipitation with anti-IRS-1 antibody and anti-SHPTP2 antibody. In both tissues there was an increase in IRS-1 association with SHPTP2 after insulin stimulation. This association occurred when IRS-1 had the highest level of tyrosine phosphorylation and the decrease in this association was more rapid than the decrease in IRS-1 phosphorylation levels. The data provide evidence against the participation of SHPTP2 in IRS-1 dephosphorylation in rat tissues, and suggest that the insulin signal transduction pathway in rat tissues is related mainly to the mitogenic effects of the hormone.
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Previous studies have demonstrated that some components of the leukocyte cell membrane, CR3 (Mac-1, CD11b/CD18) and p150/95, are able to bind to denatured proteins. Thus, it is of interest to know which effector functions of these cells can be triggered by these receptors when they interact with particles or surfaces covered with denatured proteins. In the present study we analyzed their possible role as mediators of phagocytosis of red cells covered with denatured bovine serum albumin (BSA) by mouse peritoneal macrophages. We observed that a) macrophages are able to recognize (bind to) these red cells, b) this interaction can be inhibited by denatured BSA in the fluid phase, c) there is no phagocytosis of these particles by normal macrophages, d) phagocytosis mediated by denatured BSA can be, however, effectively triggered in inflammatory macrophages induced by glycogen or in macrophages activated in vivo with LPS, and e) this phagocytic capacity is strongly dependent on the activity of tyrosine protein kinases in its signal transduction pathway, as demonstrated by using three kinds of enzyme inhibitors (genistein, quercetin and herbimycin A).
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Several primary immunodeficiency diseases affecting the interleukin 12/interferon gamma (IFN-gamma) pathway have been identified, most of them characterized by recurrent and protracted infections produced by intracellular microorganisms, particularly by several species of mycobacteria. In the present study we analyzed the expression of IFN-gamma receptor (IFN-gammaR) and signal transducer and activator of transcription 1 (STAT-1) in 4 children with Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection of uncommon clinical presentation. These molecules were evaluated by flow cytometry and Western blotting in B cells transformed with Epstein-Barr virus and mutations were scanned by single-strand conformational polymorphisms and DNA sequencing. The expression of IFN-gammaR1 was normal in all 4 patients. The genetic analysis of IFN-gammaR1 and IFN-gammaR2 coding sequences did not reveal any mutation. The expression of the STAT-1 molecule was similar in patients and healthy controls; however, when the phosphorylation of this transcription factor in response to IFN-gamma activation was evaluated by Western blot, a significant lower signal was evident in one patient. These data indicate that there are no alterations in the expression or function of the IFN-gammaR chains in these patients. However, the low level of STAT-1 phosphorylation found in one of these patients might be explained by a defect in one of the molecules involved in the signal transduction pathway after IFN-gamma interacts with its receptor. In the other three patients the inability to eliminate the mycobacteria may be due to a defect in another effector mechanism of the mononuclear phagocytes.
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Rapid and large accumulation of GABA (y-aminobutyric acid) in response to a number of plant stresses has been well documented. But the role(s) of GABA in plants is not well defined. In recent years, the possibility of GABA involvement in regulating plant growth and development has been raised. In the present study, this possibility was examined. First, to rapidly and accurately determine GABA levels in plant tissues, a spectrometric method for GABA determination was developed based on a commercially available enzyme Gabase. Seventy mM LaCb almost completely removed water-soluble pigments from plant tissues which greatly interfere with the absorbance reading at 340nm. Inactivation of GAD (glutamate decarboxylase) by immediately adding methanol to a frozen plant tissue powder was suggested to prevent GABA production during extraction. The recovery of GABA with this method was approximately 100%. Second, the relationship between GABA levels and hypocotyl elongation in soybean seedlings was analyzed using different approaches to regulate in vivo GABA levels and the elongation of hypocotyls. The following major observations were made. (1) Mechanical stimulation by stroking elevated GABA levels and concurrently induced a rapid and significant reduction in hypocotyl elongation. (2) External GABA was demonstrated to penetrate into the hypocotyls using '*C-GABA. Application of external GABA elevated in vivo GABA levels, but failed to inhibit hypocotyl elongation. (3) LaCla and blue light irradiation caused an inhibition in the elongation of dark-grown hypocotyls, whereas GABA levels were not significantly affected. (4) Ca^was suggested to be involved in the signal transduction pathway leading from mechanical stimulation to GABA production, as indicated by the ability of La'* to inhibit GABA production in stimulated hypocotyls. (5) Bicuculline, saclofen and baclofen (agonists and antagonists of GABA receptors in animals) had no effect on hypocotyl elongation. It might indicate that GABA-binding components which are structurally similar to animal GABA receptors and functionally capable of regulating plant growth may not exist in plants. Therefore, the conclusion was drawn that GABA alone is not sufficient to inhibit hypocotyl elongation. Third, chloride influx in isolated Asparagus cells was enhanced by lOmM GABA during a 3 hour incubation, but the effect was not specific for GABA. Chloride efflux was not influenced by GABA. Both influx and efflux of chloride were significantly inhibited by NPPB, a chloride channel blocker. These results suggest that GABA does not influence the activity of plant chloride channels.
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GABA (y-amino butyric acid) is a non-protein amino acid synthesized through the a-decarboxylation of L-glutamate. This reaction is catalyzed by L-glutamate decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.15), a cytosolic Ca2+/calmodulin-stimulated enzyme. The purpose of this study is to determine whether or not GABA accumulation is associated with the hypersensitive response of isolated Asparagus sprengeri mesophyll cells. The addition of 25 J.lM mastoparan, a G protein activator, to suspensions of isolated asparagus mesophyll cells significantly increased GABA synthesis and cell death. Cell death was assessed using Evan's blue dye and fluorescein diacetate tests for cell viability. In addition, mastoparan stimulated pH-dependent alkalinization of the external medium, and a rapid and large 02 consumption followed by a loss of photosynthetic activity. The rate of 02 consumption and the net decrease in 02 in the dark was enhanced by light. The inactive mastoparan analogue Mas17 was ineffective in stimulating GABA accumulation, medium alkalinization, 02 uptake and cell death. Accumulation of H202 in response tomastoparan was not detected, however, mastoparan caused the cell-dependent degradation of added H202. The pH dependence of mastoparan-stimulated alkalinization suggests cellular electrolyte leakage, while the consumption of 02 corresponds to the oxidative burst in which 02 at the cell surface is reduced to form various active oxygen species. The results are indicative of the "hypersensitive response" of plants to pathogen attack, namely, the death of cells in the locality of pathogen invasion. The data are compatible with a model in which mastoparan triggers G protein activity, subsequent intracellular signal transduction pathway/s, and the hypersensitive response. It is postulated that the physiological elicitation of the hypersensitive response involves G protein signal transduction. The synthesis of GABA during the hypersensitive response has not been documented previously; however the role/s of GABA synthesis in the hypersensitive response, if any, remain unclear.
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L'interaction entre le système immunitaire et le métabolisme du fer est bien illustrée par l'anémie des maladies chroniques (ACD), qui est fréquemment rencontrée dans les infections chroniques, l'inflammation et le cancer. La majorité des modifications dans les paramètres du fer observées dans l’ACD tient compte des modifications de l’homéostasie du fer, avec la délocalisation du métal de la circulation et les sites de l'érythropoïèse au compartiment de stockage dans les macrophages. Les mécanismes de la réponse hyposidérémique impliquent des cytokines, notamment TNF-alpha et IL-6, qui régulent les niveaux de plusieurs gènes du métabolisme du fer, y compris les transporteurs de fer et de l'hepcidine, un régulateur négatif de l’absorption du fer, ce qui entraîne l'inhibition de l'exportation du fer à travers la ferroportine 1 (FPN1) au niveau de l'intestin et les macrophages. Des études antérieures ont montré que l'IL-6 induit l’expression d’hepcidine dans les hépatocytes, mais il y a très peu de données concernant la façon par laquelle l'hepcidine et la FPN1 sont régulées dans les macrophages. Récemment, nous avons constaté que l'induction de l'hepcidine dans le foie par le lipopolysaccharide (LPS) dépend de la voie de signalisation médiée par le récepteur Toll-like 4 (TLR4). Le but de ce travail est d’identifier les ligands des TLRs capables d'induire l'hepcidine dans les macrophages et de déterminer l’exigence des TLRs dans l’induction de l’hepcidine et le développement d’hyposidérémie. En plus, nous voulons étudier l’effet de l’inflammation causée par les ligands des TLRs sur le taux de fer sérique, la production des cytokines et l'expression de l’hepcidine et de la ferroportine. D’autre part nous voulons étudier l’effet du taux du fer sur la production d’IL-6 macrophagique en réponse à la stimulation par le TLR4. D'abord, pour identifier les ligands des TLRs capables d'induire l'hepcidine dans les macrophages, nous avons traité les macrophages RAW 264.7 et les macrophages péritonéaux de souris (MPMs) avec différents ligands TLRs et on a mesuré l’expression de l'hepcidine par qRT-PCR. Nous avons observé que Pam3CSK4 (Pam), un ligand de TLR2/1; LPS, un ligand de TLR-4 et FSL1 un ligand de TLR2/6 induisent l’expression de l'hepcidine dans les cellules RAW 264.7 et les MPMs, contrairement au polyinosinic: polycytidylic acid (Poly I: C), un ligand de TLR3. De plus, LPS était capable de réprimer l’expression de la ferroportine dans les cellules RAW 264.7. Afin de mieux définir la nécessité des TLRs pour assurer cette expression, nous avons utilisé les souris TLR-2 knock-out et on a établi que l'expression de l'hepcidine dans les macrophages par LPS, Pam ou FSL1 est dépendante du TLR2. En accord avec les expériences in vitro, les études effectuées in vivo ont montré que LPS réprime l’expression de la ferroportine, ainsi que PolyI:C n’est pas capable de stimuler l'expression d'hepcidine hépatique, par contre il était efficace pour déclencher une hyposidérémie. Ensuite, on voulait déterminer la voie de signalisation utilisée dans l’induction de l’hepcidine dans les macrophages. Comme il y deux voies majeures connues pour la signalisation des TLRs : une dépendante et l’autre indépendante de la protéine MyD88, on a étudié l’expression de l’hepcidine dans les MPMs isolés des souris MyD88-/- et nous avons constaté que l'absence de signalisation MyD88 abolit l'induction de l'hepcidine déclenchée par Pam, LPS et FSL1. D’autre part, la stimulation avec du LPS induisait in vivo la production d’IL-6 et de TNF-alpha, et la stimulation d’IL-6 était renforcée in vitro par la présence du fer. Ces observations indiquent que l’expression de HAMP (Hepcidin Antimicrobial Peptide) dans les macrophages peut être régulée par différents TLRs, ce qui suggère que la production d'hepcidine macrophagique fait partie d'une réponse immunitaire activées par les TLRs.
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Le Costimulateur Inductible (ICOS) est un récepteur exprimé à la surface des cellules T CD4 auxiliaires et T CD8 cytotoxiques. Il fut démontré à l’aide de modèles murins de transplantation de moelle osseuse que ICOS joue un rôle important dans l’induction de la maladie du greffon contre l’hôte aigüe (GVHD). ICOS potentialise deux signaux médiés par le récepteur de cellules T (TCR) : l’activation de la phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) ainsi que la mobilisation interne de calcium. En conditions in vitro, dans les cellules CD4 et CD8, ICOS réussi à potentialiser le flux de calcium médié par le TCR indépendamment de PI3K. La voie de signalisation de ICOS impliquée dans la GVHD demeure inconnue. Cependant, en utilisant une lignée de souris ‘knock-in’ nommée ICOS-Y181F, dans laquelle le cellules T ont sélectivement perdu la capacité d’activer PI3K par l’entremise d’ICOS, nous avons démontré que les cellules T peuvent utiliser un mécanisme ICOS indépendant de PI3K afin d’induire la GVHD. La mobilisation interne du Ca2+ mène à l’activation de NFAT, un facteur de transcription clé régulant des gènes comme IFN-γ, qui exprime une des cytokines clés impliquées dans la GVHD. Nous émettons comme hypothèse que la capacité pathogénique intacte des cellules T ICOSY181F à induire la GVHD, repose sur la signalisation du Ca2+ indépendante de PI3K. Le but de mon projet est d’identifier les résidus responsables de cette signalisation de Ca2+ médiée par ICOS ainsi que le mécanisme par lequel ce récepteur fonctionne. À l’aide de la mutagénèse dirigée, j’ai généré des mutants d’ICOS et j’ai analysé par cytométrie en flux leur capacité à activer le flux de Ca2+. J’ai ainsi identifié un groupe de lysine sur la queue cytoplasmique d’ICOS situé à proximité de la membrane comme étant essentiel à la fonction de potentialisation du flux de Ca2+. Je fournis également des preuves de l’implication de la kinase Lck, membre de la famille de kinases Src, dans la voie de signalisation de ICOS médiant la potentialisation du flux de Ca2+. Ainsi, ICOS s’associe à Lck et mène à une augmentation de l’activation de PLCγ1, la protéine effectrice clé causant la sortie de Ca2+ de la réserve intracellulaire. En conclusion, notre étude permet de comprendre davantage une des voies de signalisation d’ICOS. L’influx de Ca2+ dans les cellules T implique la voie ICOS-Lck-PLCγ1. Une compréhension plus approfondie de cette voie de signalisation pourrait s’avérer bénéfique afin d’élaborer de nouvelles stratégies menant à la prévention de maladies reliées à ICOS, comme la GVHD.
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Serine proteases generated during injury and inflammation cleave protease-activated receptor 2 (PAR(2)) on primary sensory neurons to induce neurogenic inflammation and hyperalgesia. Hyperalgesia requires sensitization of transient receptor potential vanilloid (TRPV) ion channels by mechanisms involving phospholipase C and protein kinase C (PKC). The protein kinase D (PKD) serine/threonine kinases are activated by diacylglycerol and PKCs and can phosphorylate TRPV1. Thus, PKDs may participate in novel signal transduction pathways triggered by serine proteases during inflammation and pain. However, it is not known whether PAR(2) activates PKD, and the expression of PKD isoforms by nociceptive neurons is poorly characterized. By using HEK293 cells transfected with PKDs, we found that PAR(2) stimulation promoted plasma membrane translocation and phosphorylation of PKD1, PKD2, and PKD3, indicating activation. This effect was partially dependent on PKCepsilon. By immunofluorescence and confocal microscopy, with antibodies against PKD1/PKD2 and PKD3 and neuronal markers, we found that PKDs were expressed in rat and mouse dorsal root ganglia (DRG) neurons, including nociceptive neurons that expressed TRPV1, PAR(2), and neuropeptides. PAR(2) agonist induced phosphorylation of PKD in cultured DRG neurons, indicating PKD activation. Intraplantar injection of PAR(2) agonist also caused phosphorylation of PKD in neurons of lumbar DRG, confirming activation in vivo. Thus, PKD1, PKD2, and PKD3 are expressed in primary sensory neurons that mediate neurogenic inflammation and pain transmission, and PAR(2) agonists activate PKDs in HEK293 cells and DRG neurons in culture and in intact animals. PKD may be a novel component of a signal transduction pathway for protease-induced activation of nociceptive neurons and an important new target for antiinflammatory and analgesic therapies.
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P>A cDNA encoding a small lysine-rich protein of unknown function was identified in a tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) stigma/style suppression subtractive hybridization cDNA library. After its characterization, the corresponding gene was designated stigma/style cell cycle inhibitor 1 (SCI1). Fluorescence microscopy with an SCI1-GFP protein fusion demonstrated its nuclear localization, which was confined to the interchromatic region. Real-time RT-PCR and in situ hybridization experiments showed that SCI1 is stigma/style-specific and developmentally regulated. SCI1 RNAi knockdown and overexpression plants had stigmas/styles with remarkably enlarged and reduced areas, respectively, which was attributable to differences in cell numbers. These results indicate that SCI1 is a tissue-specific negative cell cycle regulator. The differences in cell division had an effect on the timing of the differentiation of the stigmatic papillar cells, suggesting that their differentiation is coupled to stigma cell divisions. This is consistent with a role for SCI1 in triggering differentiation through cell proliferation control. Our results revealed that SCI1 is a novel tissue-specific gene that controls cell proliferation/differentiation, probably as a component of a developmental signal transduction pathway.
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Robinow syndrome is a skeletal dysplasia with both autosomal dominant and autosomal recessive inheritance patterns. It is characterized by short stature, limb shortening, genital hypoplasia, and craniofacial abnormalities. The etiology of dominant Robinow syndrome is unknown; however, the phenotypically more severe autosomal recessive form of Robinow syndrome has been associated with mutations in the orphan tyrosine kinase receptor, ROR2, which has recently been identified as a putative WNT5A receptor. Here, we show that two different missense mutations in WNT5A, which result in amino acid substitutions of highly conserved cysteines, are associated with autosomal dominant Robinow syndrome. One mutation has been found in all living affected members of the original family described by Meinhard Robinow and another in a second unrelated patient. These missense mutations result in decreased WNT5A activity in functional assays of zebrafish and Xenopus development. This work suggests that a WNT5A/ROR2 signal transduction pathway is important in human craniofacial and skeletal development and that proper formation and growth of these structures is sensitive to variations in WNT5A function. Developmental Dynamics 239:327-337, 2010. (C) 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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Hemopressin (Hp), a 9-residue alpha-hemoglobin-derived peptide, was previously reported to function as a CB(1) cannabinoid receptor antagonist (1). In this study, we report that mass spectrometry (MS) data from peptidomics analyses of mouse brain extracts identified N-terminally extended forms of Hp containing either three (RVD-Hp alpha) or two (VD-Hp alpha) additional amino acids, as well as a beta-hemoglobinderived peptide with sequence similarity to that of hemopressin (VD-Hp beta). Characterization of the alpha-hemoglobin-derived peptides using binding and functional assays shows that in contrast to Hp, which functions as a CB(1) cannabinoid receptor antagonist, both RVD-Hp alpha and VD-Hp alpha function as agonists. Studies examining the increase in the phosphorylation of ERK1/2 levels or release of intracellular Ca(2+) indicate that these peptides activate a signal transduction pathway distinct from that activated by the endo-cannabinoid, 2-arachidonoylglycerol, or the classic CB(1) agonist, Hu-210. This finding suggests an additional mode of regulation of endogenous cannabinoid receptor activity. Taken together, these results suggest that the CB(1) receptor is involved in the integration of signals from both lipid-and peptide-derived signaling molecules.-Gomes, I., Grushko, J. S., Golebiewska, U., Hoogendoorn, S., Gupta, A., Heimann, A. S., Ferro, E. S., Scarlata, S., Fricker, L. D., Devi, L. A. Novel endogenous peptide agonists of cannabinoid receptors. FASEB J. 23, 3020-3029 (2009). www.fasebj.org
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Maternal malnutrition was shown to affect early growth and leads to permanent alterations in insulin secretion and sensitivity of offspring. In addition, epidemiological studies showed an association between low birth weight and glucose intolerance in adult life. To understand these interactions better, we investigated the insulin secretion by isolated islets and the early events related to insulin action in the hind-limb muscle of adult rats fed a diet of 17% protein (control) or 6% protein [low (LP) protein] during fetal life, suckling and after weaning, and in rats receiving 6% protein during fetal life and suckling followed by a 17% protein diet after weaning (recovered). The basal and maximal insulin secretion by islets from rats fed LP diet and the basal release by islets from recovered rats were significantly lower than that of control rats. The dose-response curves to glucose of islets from LP and recovered groups were shifted to the right compared to control islets, with the half-maximal response (EC 50) occurring at 16.9 ± 1.3, 12.4 ± 0.5 and 8.4 ± 0.1 mmol/L, respectively. The levels of insulin receptor, as well as insulin receptor substrate-1 and phosphorylation and the association between insulin receptor substrate-1 and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase were greater in rats fed a LP diet than in control rats. In recovered rats, these variables were not significantly different from those of the other two groups. These results suggest that glucose homeostasis is maintained in LP and recovered rats by an increased sensitivity to insulin as a result of alterations in the early steps of the insulin signal transduction pathway.