582 resultados para Golgi


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This is the first TEM examination of vitellogenesis in the cestode Aporhynchus menezesi, a parasite of the velvet belly lanternshark Etmopterus spinax and a member of a little-studied trypanorhynch family, the Aporhynchidae. The synthetic activity of vitellocytes plays two important functions in the developmental biology of cestodes: (1) their shell-globules serve in eggshell formation; and (2) their accumulated reserves of glycogen and lipids represent a food source for the developing embryo. In A. menezesi, vitelline follicles consist of cells at various stages of development, from peripheral, immature cells of the gonial type to mature cells towards the centre of the follicle. These stages are: (I) immature; (II) early differentiation; (III) advanced maturation; and (IV) mature. Gradual changes involved in this process occur within each stage. Vitellogenesis involves: (1) an increase in cell volume; (2) the development of a smooth endoplasmic reticulum and an accelerated formation and accumulation of both unsaturated and saturated lipid droplets, along with their continuous enlargement and fusion; (3) the formation of individual β-glycogen particles and their accumulation in the form of glycogen islands scattered among lipid droplets in the cytoplasm of maturing and mature vitellocytes; (4) the rapid accumulation of large, moderately saturated lipid droplets accompanied by dense accumulations of β-glycogen along with proteinaceous shell-globules or shell-globule clusters in the peripheral layer during the advanced stage of maturation; (5) the development of cisternae of granular endoplasmic reticulum that produce dense, proteinaceous shell-globules; (6) the development of Golgi complexes engaged in the packaging of this material; and (7) the progressive and continuous enlargement of shell-globules into very large clusters in the peripheral layer during the advanced stage of maturation. Vitellogenesis in A. menezesi, only to some extent, resembles that previously described for four other trypanorhynchs. It differs in: (i) the reversed order of secretory activities in the differentiating vitellocytes, namely the accumulation of large lipid droplets accompanied by glycogenesis or β-glycogen formation during early differentiation (stage II), i.e. before the secretory activity, which is predominantly protein synthesis for shell-globule formation (stage III); (ii) the very heavy accumulation of large lipid droplets during the final stage of cytodifferentiation (stage IV); and (iii) the small number of β-glycogen particles present in mature vitellocytes. Ultracytochemical staining with PA-TCH-SP for glycogen proved positive for a small number of β-glycogen particles in differentiating and mature vitellocytes. Hypotheses, concerning the interrelationships of patterns of vitellogenesis, possible modes of egg formation, embryonic development and life-cycles, are commented upon.

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This is the first TEM examination of vitellogenesis in the cestode Aporhynchus menezesi, a parasite of the velvet belly lanternshark Etmopterus spinax and a member of a little-studied trypanorhynch family, the Aporhynchidae. The synthetic activity of vitellocytes plays two important functions in the developmental biology of cestodes: (1) their shell-globules serve in eggshell formation; and (2) their accumulated reserves of glycogen and lipids represent a food source for the developing embryo. In A. menezesi, vitelline follicles consist of cells at various stages of development, from peripheral, immature cells of the gonial type to mature cells towards the centre of the follicle. These stages are: (I) immature; (II) early differentiation; (III) advanced maturation; and (IV) mature. Gradual changes involved in this process occur within each stage. Vitellogenesis involves: (1) an increase in cell volume; (2) the development of a smooth endoplasmic reticulum and an accelerated formation and accumulation of both unsaturated and saturated lipid droplets, along with their continuous enlargement and fusion; (3) the formation of individual β-glycogen particles and their accumulation in the form of glycogen islands scattered among lipid droplets in the cytoplasm of maturing and mature vitellocytes; (4) the rapid accumulation of large, moderately saturated lipid droplets accompanied by dense accumulations of β-glycogen along with proteinaceous shell-globules or shell-globule clusters in the peripheral layer during the advanced stage of maturation; (5) the development of cisternae of granular endoplasmic reticulum that produce dense, proteinaceous shell-globules; (6) the development of Golgi complexes engaged in the packaging of this material; and (7) the progressive and continuous enlargement of shell-globules into very large clusters in the peripheral layer during the advanced stage of maturation. Vitellogenesis in A. menezesi, only to some extent, resembles that previously described for four other trypanorhynchs. It differs in: (i) the reversed order of secretory activities in the differentiating vitellocytes, namely the accumulation of large lipid droplets accompanied by glycogenesis or β-glycogen formation during early differentiation (stage II), i.e. before the secretory activity, which is predominantly protein synthesis for shell-globule formation (stage III); (ii) the very heavy accumulation of large lipid droplets during the final stage of cytodifferentiation (stage IV); and (iii) the small number of β-glycogen particles present in mature vitellocytes. Ultracytochemical staining with PA-TCH-SP for glycogen proved positive for a small number of β-glycogen particles in differentiating and mature vitellocytes. Hypotheses, concerning the interrelationships of patterns of vitellogenesis, possible modes of egg formation, embryonic development and life-cycles, are commented upon.

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Background PPP1R6 is a protein phosphatase 1 glycogen-targeting subunit (PP1-GTS) abundant in skeletal muscle with an undefined metabolic control role. Here PPP1R6 effects on myotube glycogen metabolism, particle size and subcellular distribution are examined and compared with PPP1R3C/PTG and PPP1R3A/GM. Results PPP1R6 overexpression activates glycogen synthase (GS), reduces its phosphorylation at Ser-641/0 and increases the extracted and cytochemically-stained glycogen content, less than PTG but more than GM. PPP1R6 does not change glycogen phosphorylase activity. All tested PP1-GTS-cells have more glycogen particles than controls as found by electron microscopy of myotube sections. Glycogen particle size is distributed for all cell-types in a continuous range, but PPP1R6 forms smaller particles (mean diameter 14.4 nm) than PTG (36.9 nm) and GM (28.3 nm) or those in control cells (29.2 nm). Both PPP1R6- and GM-derived glycogen particles are in cytosol associated with cellular structures; PTG-derived glycogen is found in membrane- and organelle-devoid cytosolic glycogen-rich areas; and glycogen particles are dispersed in the cytosol in control cells. A tagged PPP1R6 protein at the C-terminus with EGFP shows a diffuse cytosol pattern in glucose-replete and -depleted cells and a punctuate pattern surrounding the nucleus in glucose-depleted cells, which colocates with RFP tagged with the Golgi targeting domain of β-1,4-galactosyltransferase, according to a computational prediction for PPP1R6 Golgi location. Conclusions PPP1R6 exerts a powerful glycogenic effect in cultured muscle cells, more than GM and less than PTG. PPP1R6 protein translocates from a Golgi to cytosolic location in response to glucose. The molecular size and subcellular location of myotube glycogen particles is determined by the PPP1R6, PTG and GM scaffolding.

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A crucial step in the life cycle of arenaviruses is the biosynthesis of the mature fusion-active viral envelope glycoprotein (GP) that is essential for virus-host cell attachment and entry. The maturation of the arenavirus GP precursor (GPC) critically depends on proteolytic processing by the cellular proprotein convertase (PC) subtilisin kexin isozyme-1 (SKI-1)/site-1 protease (S1P). Here we undertook a molecular characterization of the SKI-1/S1P processing of the GPCs of the prototypic arenavirus lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) and the pathogenic Lassa virus (LASV). Previous studies showed that the GPC of LASV undergoes processing in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER)/cis-Golgi compartment, whereas the LCMV GPC is cleaved in a late Golgi compartment. Herein we confirm these findings and provide evidence that the SKI-1/S1P recognition site RRLL, present in the SKI-1/S1P prodomain and LASV GPC, but not in the LCMV GPC, is crucial for the processing of the LASV GPC in the ER/cis-Golgi compartment. Our structure-function analysis revealed that the cleavage of arenavirus GPCs, but not cellular substrates, critically depends on the autoprocessing of SKI-1/S1P, suggesting differences in the processing of cellular and viral substrates. Deletion mutagenesis showed that the transmembrane and intracellular domains of SKI-1/S1P are dispensable for arenavirus GPC processing. The expression of a soluble form of the protease in SKI-I/S1P-deficient cells resulted in the efficient processing of arenavirus GPCs and rescued productive virus infection. However, exogenous soluble SKI-1/S1P was unable to process LCMV and LASV GPCs displayed at the surface of SKI-I/S1P-deficient cells, indicating that GPC processing occurs in an intracellular compartment. In sum, our study reveals important differences in the SKI-1/S1P processing of viral and cellular substrates.

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Summary Prevalence of type 2 diabetes is increasing worldwide at alarming rates, probably secondarily to that of obesity. As type 2 diabetes is characterized by blood hyperglycemia, controlling glucose entry into tissues from the bloodstream is key to maintain glycemia within acceptable ranges. In this context, several glucose transporter isoforms have been cloned recently and some of them have appeared to play important regulatory roles. Better characterizing two of them (GLUT8 and GLUT9) was the purpose of my work. The first part of my work was focused on GLUT8, which is mainly expressed in the brain and is able to transport glucose with high affinity. GLUT8 is retained intracellularly at basal state depending on an N-terminal dileucine motif, thus implying that cell surface expression may be induced by extracellular triggers. In this regard, I was interested in better defining GLUT8 subcellular localization at basal state and in finding signals promoting its translocation, using an adenoviral vector expressing a myc epitope-tagged version of the transporter, thus allowing expression and detection of cell-surface GLUT8 in primary hippocampal neurons and PC 12 cells. This tool enabled me to found out that GLUT8 resides in a unique compartment different from lysosomes, endoplasmic reticulum, endosomes and the Golgi. In addition, absence of GLUT8 translocation following pharmacological activation of several signalling pathways suggests that GLUT8 does not ever translocate to the cell surface, but would rather fulfill its role in its unique intracellular compartment. The second part of my work was focused on GLUT9, which -contrarily to GLUT8 - is unable to transport glucose, but retains the ability to bind glucose-derived cross-linker molecules, thereby suggesting that it may be a glucose sensor rather than a true glucose transporter. The aim of the project was thus to define if GLUT9 triggers intracellular signals when activated. Therefore, adenoviral vectors expressing GLUTS were used to infect both ßpancreatic and liver-derived cell lines, as GLUTS is endogenously expressed in the liver. Comparison of gene expression between cells infected with the GLUTS-expressing adenovirus and cells infected with a GFP-expressing control adenovirus ended up in the identification of the transcription factor HNF4α as being upregulated in aGLUT9-dependent manner. Résumé La prévalence du diabète de type 2 augmente de façon alarmante dans le monde entier, probablement secondairement à celle de l'obésité. Le diabète de type 2 étant caractérisé par une glycémie sanguine élevée, l'entrée du glucose dans les tissus depuis la circulation sanguine constitue un point de contrôle important pour maintenir la glycémie à des valeurs acceptables. Dans ce contexte, plusieurs isoformes de transporteurs au glucose ont été clonées récemment et certaines d'entre elles sont apparues comme jouant d'importants rôles régulateurs. Mieux caractériser deux d'entre elles (GLUT8 et GLUT9) était le but de mon travail. La première partie de mon travail a été centrée sur GLUT8, qui est exprimé principalement dans le cerveau et qui peut transporter le glucose avec une haute affinité. GLUT8 est retenu intracellulairement à l'état basal de façon dépendante d'un motif dileucine N-terminal, ce qui implique que son expression à la surface cellulaire pourrait être induite par des stimuli extracellulaires. Dans cette optique, je me suis intéressé à mieux définir la localisation subcellulaire de GLUT8 à l'état basal et à trouver des signaux activant sa translocation, en utilisant comme outil un vecteur adénoviral exprimant une version marquée (tag myc) du transporteur, me permettant ainsi d'exprimer et de détecter GLUT8 à la surface cellulaire dans des neurones hippocampiques primaires et des cellules PC12. Cet outil m'a permis de montrer que GLUT8 réside dans un compartiment unique différent des lysosomes, du réticulum endoplasmique, des endosomes, ainsi que du Golgi. De plus, l'absence de translocation de GLUT8 à la suite de l'activation pharmacologique de plusieurs voies de signalisation suggère que GLUT8 ne transloque jamais à la membrane plasmique, mais jouerait plutôt un rôle au sein même de son compartiment intracellulaire unique. La seconde partie de mon travail a été centrée sur GLUT9, lequel -contrairement à GLUT8 -est incapable de transporter le glucose, mais conserve la capacité de se lier à des molécules dérivées du glucose, suggérant que ce pourrait être un senseur de glucose plutôt qu'un vrai transporteur. Le but du projet a donc été de définir si GLUT9 active des signaux intracellulaires quand il est lui-même activé. Pour ce faire, des vecteurs adénoviraux exprimant GLUT9 ont été utilisés pour infecter des lignées cellulaires dérivées de cellules ßpancréatiques et d'hépatocytes, GLUT9 étant exprimé de façon endogène dans le foie. La comparaison de l'expression des gènes entre des cellules infectées avec l'adénovirus exprimant GLUT9 et un adénovirus contrôle exprimant la GFP a permis d'identifier le facteur de transcription HNF4α comme étant régulé de façon GLUT9-dépendante. Résumé tout public Il existe deux types bien distincts de diabète. Le diabète de type 1 constitue environ 10 des cas de diabète et se déclare généralement à l'enfance. Il est caractérisé par une incapacité du pancréas à sécréter une hormone, l'insuline, qui régule la concentration sanguine du glucose (glycémie). Il en résulte une hyperglycémie sévère qui, si le patient n'est pas traité à l'insuline, conduit à de graves dommages à divers organes, ce qui peut mener à la cécité, à la perte des membres inférieurs, ainsi qu'à l'insuffisance rénale. Le diabète de type 2 se déclare plus tard dans la vie. Il n'est pas causé par une déficience en insuline, mais plutôt par une incapacité de l'insuline à agir sur ses tissus cibles. Le nombre de cas de diabète de type 2 augmente de façon dramatique, probablement à la suite de l'augmentation des cas d'obésité, le surpoids chronique étant le principal facteur de risque de diabète. Chez l'individu sain, le glucose sanguin est transporté dans différents organes (foie, muscles, tissu adipeux,...) où il est utilisé comme source d'énergie. Chez le patient diabétique, le captage de glucose est altéré, expliquant ainsi l'hyperglycémie. Il est ainsi crucial d'étudier les mécanismes permettant ce captage. Ainsi, des protéines permettant l'entrée de glucose dans la cellule depuis le milieu extracellulaire ont été découvertes depuis une vingtaine d'années. La plupart d'entre elles appartiennent à une sous-famille de protéines nommée GLUT (pour "GLUcose Transporters") dont cinq membres ont été caractérisés et nommés selon l'ordre de leur découverte (GLUT1-5). Néanmoins, la suppression de ces protéines chez la souris par des techniques moléculaires n'affecte pas totalement le captage de glucose, suggérant ainsi que des transporteurs de glucose encore inconnus pourraient exister. De telles protéines ont été isolées ces dernières années et nommées selon l'ordre de leur découverte (GLUT6-14). Durant mon travail de thèse, je me suis intéressé à deux d'entre elles, GLUT8 et GLUT9, qui ont été découvertes précédemment dans le laboratoire. GLUT8 est exprimé principalement dans le cerveau. La protéine n'est pas exprimée à la surface de la cellule, mais est retenue à l'intérieur. Des mécanismes complexes doivent donc exister pour déplacer le transporteur à la surface cellulaire, afin qu'il puisse permettre l'entrée du glucose dans la cellule. Mon travail a consisté d'une part à définir où se trouve le transporteur à l'intérieur de la cellule, et d'autre part à comprendre les mécanismes capables de déplacer GLUT8 vers la surface cellulaire, en utilisant des neurones exprimant une version marquée du transporteur, permettant ainsi sa détection par des méthodes biochimiques. Cela m'a permis de montrer que GLUT8 est localisé dans une partie de la cellule encore non décrite à ce jour et qu'il n'est jamais déplacé à la surface cellulaire, ce qui suggère que le transporteur doit jouer un rôle à l'intérieur de la cellule et non à sa surface. GLUT9 est exprimé dans le foie et dans les reins. Il ressemble beaucoup à GLUT8, mais ne transporte pas le glucose, ce qui suggère que ce pourrait être un récepteur au glucose plutôt qu'un transporteur à proprement parler. Le but de mon travail a été de tester cette hypothèse, en comparant des cellules du foie exprimant GLUT9 avec d'autres n'exprimant pas la protéine. Par des méthodes d'analyses moléculaires, j'ai pu montrer que la présence de GLUT9 dans les cellules du foie augmente l'expression de HNF4α, une protéine connue pour réguler la sécrétion d'insuline dans le pancréas ainsi que la production de glucose dans le foie. Des expériences complémentaires seront nécessaires afin de mieux comprendre par quels mécanismes GLUT9 influence l'expression de HNF4α dans le foie, ainsi que de définir l'importance de GLUT9 dans la régulation de la glycémie chez l'animal entier.

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GLUT8 is a high-affinity glucose transporter present mostly in testes and a subset of brain neurons. At the cellular level, it is found in a poorly defined intracellular compartment in which it is retained by an N-terminal dileucine motif. Here we assessed GLUT8 colocalization with markers for different cellular compartments and searched for signals, which could trigger its cell surface expression. We showed that when expressed in PC12 cells, GLUT8 was located in a perinuclear compartment in which it showed partial colocalization with markers for the endoplasmic reticulum but not with markers for the trans-Golgi network, early endosomes, lysosomes, and synaptic-like vesicles. To evaluate its presence at the plasma membrane, we generated a recombinant adenovirus for the expression of GLUT8 containing an extracellular myc epitope. Cell surface expression was evaluated by immunofluorescence microscopy of transduced PC12 cells or primary hippocampal neurons exposed to different stimuli. Those included substances inducing depolarization, activation of protein kinase A and C, activation or inhibition of tyrosine kinase-linked signaling pathways, glucose deprivation, AMP-activated protein kinase stimulation, and osmotic shock. None of these stimuli-induced GLUT8 cell surface translocation. Furthermore, when GLUT8myc was cotransduced with a dominant-negative form of dynamin or GLUT8myc-expressing PC-12 cells or neurons were incubated with an anti-myc antibody, no evidence for constitutive recycling of the transporter through the cell surface could be obtained. Thus, in cells normally expressing it, GLUT8 was associated with a specific intracellular compartment in which it may play an as-yet-uncharacterized role.

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Mucin 5AC (MUC5AC) is secreted by goblet cells of the respiratory tract and, surprisingly, also expressed de novo in mucus secreting cancer lines. siRNA-mediated knockdown of 7343 human gene products in a human colonic cancer goblet cell line (HT29-18N2) revealed new proteins, including a Ca(2+)-activated channel TRPM5, for MUC5AC secretion. TRPM5 was required for PMA and ATP-induced secretion of MUC5AC from the post-Golgi secretory granules. Stable knockdown of TRPM5 reduced a TRPM5-like current and ATP-mediated Ca(2+) signal. ATP-induced MUC5AC secretion depended strongly on Ca(2+) influx, which was markedly reduced in TRPM5 knockdown cells. The difference in ATP-induced Ca(2+) entry between control and TRPM5 knockdown cells was abrogated in the absence of extracellular Ca(2+) and by inhibition of the Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger (NCX). Accordingly, MUC5AC secretion was reduced by inhibition of NCX. Thus TRPM5 activation by ATP couples TRPM5-mediated Na(+) entry to promote Ca(2+) uptake via an NCX to trigger MUC5AC secretion

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Changes in the glycosylation pattern of cellular glycoproteins constitute a hallmark in human cancer and influence tumor progression, suggesting that inhibitors of selected glycosidases may control cancer progression. Following the studies on swainsonine, a natural inhibitor of Golgi alpha-mannosidase II, which highlighted the inhibition of cellular mannosidases as a potential innovative approach for the treatment of cancer, several dihydroxylated pyrrolidines and analogues were developed as new potent inhibitors of alpha-mannosidases II able to induce antiproliferative effects in human cancer cells.

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Neuropeptide- and hormone-containing secretory granules (SGs) are synthesized at the trans-Golgi network (TGN) as immature secretory granules (ISGs) and complete their maturation in the F-actin-rich cell cortex. This maturation process is characterized by acidification-dependent processing of cargo proteins, condensation of the SG matrix and removal of membrane and proteins not destined to mature secretory granules (MSGs). Here we addressed a potential role of Rab3 isoforms in these maturation steps by expressing their nucleotide-binding deficient mutants in PC12 cells. Our data show that the presence of Rab3D(N135I) decreases the restriction of maturing SGs to the F-actin-rich cell cortex, blocks the removal of the endoprotease furin from SGs and impedes the processing of the luminal SG protein secretogranin II. This strongly suggests that Rab3D is implicated in the subcellular localization and maturation of ISGs.

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In adipocytes and muscle cells, the GLUT4 glucose transporter isoform is present in intracellular vesicles which continuously recycle between an intracytoplasmic location and the plasma membrane. It is not clear whether the GLUT4-vesicles represent a specific kind of vesicle or resemble typical secretory granules or synaptic-like microvesicles. To approach this question, we expressed GLUT4 in the beta cell line RINm5F and determined its intracellular localization by subcellular fractionation and by immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy. GLUT4 was not found in insulin granules but was associated with a subpopulation of smooth-surface vesicles present in the trans-Golgi region and in vesicular structures adjacent to the plasma membrane. In the trans-Golgi region, GLUT4 did not colocalize with synaptophysin or TGN38. Incubation of the cells with horseradish peroxidase (HRP) led to colocalization of HRP and GLUT4 in some endosomal structures adjacent to the plasma membrane and in occasional trans-Golgi region vesicles. When cells were incubated in the presence of Bafilomycin A, analysis by confocal microscopy revealed GLUT4 in numerous large spots present throughout the cytoplasm, many of which costained for TGN38 and synaptophysin. By immunoelectron microscopy, numerous endosomes were observed which stained strongly for GLUT4. Together our data demonstrate that ectopic expression of GLUT4 in insulinoma cells reveals the presence of a subset of vesicular structures distinct from synaptic-like vesicles and insulin secretory granules. Furthermore, they indicate that GLUT4 constitutively recycles between the plasma membrane and its intracellular location by an endocytic route also taken by TGN38 and synaptophysin.

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Inhibition of cholesterol export from late endosomes causes cellular cholesterol imbalance, including cholesterol depletion in the trans-Golgi network (TGN). Here, using Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) Niemann-Pick type C1 (NPC1) mutant cell lines and human NPC1 mutant fibroblasts, we show that altered cholesterol levels at the TGN/endosome boundaries trigger Syntaxin 6 (Stx6) accumulation into VAMP3, transferrin, and Rab11-positive recycling endosomes (REs). This increases Stx6/VAMP3 interaction and interferes with the recycling of αVβ3 and α5β1 integrins and cell migration, possibly in a Stx6-dependent manner. In NPC1 mutant cells, restoration of cholesterol levels in the TGN, but not inhibition of VAMP3, restores the steady-state localization of Stx6 in the TGN. Furthermore, elevation of RE cholesterol is associated with increased amounts of Stx6 in RE. Hence, the fine-tuning of cholesterol levels at the TGN-RE boundaries together with a subset of cholesterol-sensitive SNARE proteins may play a regulatory role in cell migration and invasion.

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The tumor necrosis factor (TNF) family member B cell activating factor (BAFF) binds B cells and enhances B cell receptor-triggered proliferation. We find that B cell maturation antigen (BCMA), a predicted member of the TNF receptor family expressed primarily in mature B cells, is a receptor for BAFF. Although BCMA was previously localized to the Golgi apparatus, BCMA was found to be expressed on the surface of transfected cells and tonsillar B cells. A soluble form of BCMA, which inhibited the binding of BAFF to a B cell line, induced a dramatic decrease in the number of peripheral B cells when administered in vivo. Moreover, culturing splenic cells in the presence of BAFF increased survival of a percentage of the B cells. These results are consistent with a role for BAFF in maintaining homeostasis of the B cell population.

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Saccharomyces cerevisiae Grx6 and Grx7 are two monothiol glutaredoxins whose active-site sequences (CSYS and CPYS, respectively) are reminiscent of the CPYC active-site sequence of classical dithiol glutaredoxins. Both proteins contain an N-terminal transmembrane domain which is responsible for their association to membranes of the early secretory pathway vesicles, facing the luminal side. Thus, Grx6 localizes at the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi compartments, while Grx7 is mostly at the Golgi. Expression of GRX6 is modestly upregulated by several stresses (calcium, sodium, and peroxides) in a manner dependent on the Crz1-calcineurin pathway. Some of these stresses also upregulate GRX7 expression under the control of the Msn2/4 transcription factor. The N glycosylation inhibitor tunicamycin induces the expression of both genes along with protein accumulation. Mutants lacking both glutaredoxins display reduced sensitivity to tunicamycin, although the drug is still able to manifest its inhibitory effect on a reporter glycoprotein. Grx6 and Grx7 have measurable oxidoreductase activity in vivo, which is increased in the presence of tunicamycin. Both glutaredoxins could be responsible for the regulation of the sulfhydryl oxidative state at the oxidant conditions of the early secretory pathway vesicles. However, the differences in location and expression responses against stresses suggest that their functions are not totally overlapping.

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Santiago Ramón y Cajal developed a great body of scientific research during the last decade of 19th century, mainly between 1888 and 1892, when he published more than 30 manuscripts. The neuronal theory, the structure of dendrites and spines, and fine microscopic descriptions of numerous neural circuits are among these studies. In addition, numerous cell types (neuronal and glial) were described by Ramón y Cajal during this time using this 'reazione nera' or Golgi method. Among these neurons were the special cells of the molecular layer of the neocortex. These cells were also termed Cajal cells or Retzius cells by other colleagues. Today these cells are known as Cajal-Retzius cells. From the earliest description, several biological aspects of these fascinating cells have been analyzed (e.g., cell morphology, physiological properties, origin and cellular fate, putative function during cortical development, etc). In this review we will summarize in a temporal basis the emerging knowledge concerning this cell population with specific attention the pioneer studies of Santiago Ramón y Cajal.

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The inhibition of phosphatidic acid phosphatase (PAP) activity by propanolol indicates that diacylglycerol (DAG) is required for the formation of transport carriers at the Golgi and for retrograde trafficking to the ER. Here we report that the PAP2 family member lipid phosphate phosphatase 3 (LPP3, also known as PAP2b) localizes in compartments of the secretory pathway from ER export sites to the Golgi complex. The depletion of human LPP3: (i) reduces the number of tubules generated from the ER-Golgi intermediate compartment and the Golgi, with those formed from the Golgi being longer in LPP3-silenced cells than in control cells; (ii) impairs the Rab6-dependent retrograde transport of Shiga toxin subunit B from the Golgi to the ER, but not the anterograde transport of VSV-G or ssDsRed; and (iii) induces a high accumulation of Golgi-associated membrane buds. LPP3 depletion also reduces levels of de novo synthesized DAG and the Golgi-associated DAG contents. Remarkably, overexpression of a catalytically inactive form of LPP3 mimics the effects of LPP3 knockdown on Rab6-dependent retrograde transport. We conclude that LPP3 participates in the formation of retrograde transport carriers at the ER-Golgi interface, where it transitorily cycles, and during its route to the plasma membrane.