924 resultados para Chick Embryonic Kinase


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Oxidative metabolism of the isolated embryonic heart of the chick has been determined using a spectrophotometric technique allowing global as well as localized micromeasurements of the O2 uptake. Entire hearts, excised from embryos of 10 somites (primordia fused, stage 10 HH) and 40 somites (S shaped, stage 20 HH) were placed in a special chamber under controlled metabolic conditions where they continued to beat spontaneously and regularly. During the 32 h of development, the O2 consumption of the whole heart increased from 0.9 +/- 0.1 to 5.3 +/- 0.8 nmol O2/h. These values corrected for protein content were, however, comparable (0.45 nmol O2.h-1.micrograms-1). At stage 10-12, the O2 uptake varied along the cardiac tube (from 0.74 to 1.0 nmol O2.h-1.mm-2). From stage 10 to 20, the O2 uptake per unit area of ventricle wall increased from 0.7 +/- 0.2 to 1.8 +/- 0.2 nmol O2.h-1.mm-2, and the O2 uptake per myocardial volume during one cardiac cycle varied from 7 to 2.5 nmol O2/cm3. These results indicate that, despite an intense morphogenesis, the cardiac tissue has a rather low and stable oxidative metabolism, although the O2 requirement of the whole heart increases significantly. Moreover, the normalized suprabasal aerobic energy expenditure decreases throughout early cardiogenesis. The functional integrity of the isolated embryonic heart combined with the experimental possibilities of the microtechnique make the preparation appropriate for studying the changes in cardiac metabolism during development.

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Immunoreactivity to calbindin D-28k, a vitamin D-dependent calcium-binding protein, is expressed by neuronal subpopulations of dorsal root ganglia (DRG) in the chick embryo. To determine whether the expression of this phenotypic characteristic is maintained in vitro and controlled by environmental factors, dissociated DRG cell cultures were performed under various conditions. Subpopulations of DRG cells cultured at embryonic day 10 displayed calbindin-immunoreactive cell bodies and neurites in both neuron-enriched or mixed DRG cell cultures. The number of calbindin-immunoreactive ganglion cells increased up to 7-10 days of culture independently of the changes occurring in the whole neuronal population. The presence of non-neuronal cells, which promotes the maturation of the sensory neurons, tended to reduce the percentage of calbindin-immunoreactive cell bodies. Addition of horse serum enhanced both the number of calbindin-positive neurons and the intensity of the immunostaining, but does not prevent the decline of the subpopulation of calbindin-immunoreactive neurons during the second week of culture; on the contrary, the addition of muscular extract to cultures at 10 days maintained the number of calbindin-expressing neurons. While calbindin-immunoreactive cell bodies grown in culture were small- or medium-sized, no correlation was found between cell size and immunostaining density. At the ultrastructural level, the calbindin immunoreaction was distributed throughout the neuroplasm. These results indicate that the expression of calbindin by sensory neurons grown in vitro may be modulated by horse serum-contained factors or interaction with non-neuronal cells. As distinct from horse serum, muscular extract is able to maintain the expression of calbindin by a subpopulation of DRG cells.

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Leptin, a 16-kDa protein mainly produced by adipose tissue, has been involved in the control of energy balance through its hypothalamic receptor. However, pleiotropic effects of leptin have been identified in reproduction and pregnancy, particularly in placenta, where it was found to be expressed. In the current study, we examined the effect of cAMP in the regulation of leptin expression in trophoblastic cells. We found that dibutyryl cAMP [(Bu)(2)cAMP], a cAMP analog, showed an inducing effect on endogenous leptin expression in BeWo and JEG-3 cell lines when analyzed by Western blot analysis and quantitative RT-PCR. Maximal effect was achieved at 100 microM. Leptin promoter activity was also stimulated, evaluated by transient transfection with a reporter plasmid construction. Similar results were obtained with human term placental explants, thus indicating physiological relevance. Because cAMP usually exerts its actions through activation of protein kinase A (PKA) signaling, this pathway was analyzed. We found that cAMP response element-binding protein (CREB) phosphorylation was significantly increased with (Bu)(2)cAMP treatment. Furthermore, cotransfection with the catalytic subunit of PKA and/or the transcription factor CREB caused a significant stimulation on leptin promoter activity. On the other hand, the cotransfection with a dominant negative mutant of the regulatory subunit of PKA inhibited leptin promoter activity. We determined that cAMP effect could be blocked by pharmacologic inhibition of PKA or adenylyl ciclase in BeWo cells and in human placental explants. Thereafter, we decided to investigate the involvement of the MAPK/ERK signaling pathway in the cAMP effect on leptin induction. We found that 50 microm PD98059, a MAPK kinase inhibitor, partially blocked leptin induction by cAMP, measured both by Western blot analysis and reporter transient transfection assay. Moreover, ERK 1/2 phosphorylation was significantly increased with (Bu)(2)cAMP treatment, and this effect was dose dependent. Finally, we observed that 50 microm PD98059 inhibited cAMP-dependent phosphorylation of CREB in placental explants. In summary, we provide some evidence suggesting that cAMP induces leptin expression in placental cells and that this effect seems to be mediated by a cross talk between PKA and MAPK signaling pathways.

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Neural crest cells (NCC) give rise to much of the tissue that forms the vertebrate head and face, including cartilage and bone, cranial ganglia and teeth. In this study we show that conditional expression of a dominant-negative (DN) form of Rho kinase (Rock) in mouse NCC results in severe hypoplasia of the frontonasal processes and first pharyngeal arch, ultimately resulting in reduction of the maxilla and nasal bones and severe craniofacial clefting affecting the nose, palate and lip. These defects resemble frontonasal dysplasia in humans. Disruption of the actin cytoskeleton, which leads to abnormalities in cell-matrix attachment, is seen in the RockDN;Wnt1-cre mutant embryos. This leads to elevated cell death, resulting in NCC deficiency and hypoplastic NCC-derived craniofacial structures. Rock is thus essential for survival of NCC that form the craniofacial region. We propose that reduced NCC numbers in the frontonasal processes and first pharyngeal arch, resulting from exacerbated cell death, may be the common mechanism underlying frontonasal dysplasia.

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Much progress has been made over the past decades in the development of in vitro techniques for the assessment of chemically induced effects in embryonic and fetal development. In vitro assays have originally been developed to provide information on the mechanism of action of normal development, and have hence more adequately been used in fundamental research. These assays had to undergo extensive modification to be used in developmental toxicity testing. The present paper focuses on the rat whole embryo culture system, but also reviews modifications that were undertaken for the in vitro chick embryo system and the aggregate cultures of fetal rat brain cells. Today these tests cannot replace the existing in vivo developmental toxicity tests. They can, however, be used to screen chemicals for further development or further testing. In addition, these in vitro tests provide valuable information on the mechanisms of developmental toxicity and help to understand the relevancy of findings for humans. In vitro systems, combined with selected in vivo testing and pharmacokinetic investigations in animals and humans, can thus provide essential information for human risk assessment.

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RESUME Introduction : Dans le coeur adulte, l'ischémie et la reperfusion entraînent des perturbations électriques, mécaniques, biochimiques et structurales qui peuvent causer des dommages réversibles ou irréversibles selon la sévérité de l'ischémie. Malgré les récents progrès en cardiologie et en chirurgie foetales, la connaissance des mécanismes impliqués dans la réponse du myocarde embryonnaire à un stress hypoxique transitoire demeure lacunaire. Le but de ce travail a donc été de caractériser les effets chrono-, dromo- et inotropes de l'anoxie et de la réoxygénation sur un modèle de coeur embryonnaire isolé. D'autre part, les effets du monoxyde d'azote (NO) et de la modulation des canaux KATP mitochondriaux (mito KATP) sur la récupération fonctionnelle postanoxique ont été étudiés. La production myocardique de radicaux d'oxygène (ROS) et l'activité de MAP Kinases (ERK et JNK) impliquées dans la signalisation cellulaire ont également été déterminées. Méthodes : Des coeurs d'embryons de poulet âgés de 4 jours battant spontanément ont été placés dans une chambre de culture puis soumis à une anoxie de 30 min suivie d'une réoxygénation de 60 min. L'activité électrique (ECG), les contractions de l'oreillette, du ventricule et du conotroncus (détectées par photométrie), la production de ROS (mesure de la fluorescence du DCFH) et l'activité kinase de ERK et JNK dans le ventricule ont été déterminées au cours de l'anoxie et de la réoxygénation. Les coeurs ont été traités avec un bloqueur des NO synthases (L-NAME), un donneur de NO (DETA-NONOate), un activateur (diazoxide) ou un inhibiteur (5-HD) des canaux mitoKATP un inhibiteur non-spécifique des PKC (chélérythrine) ou un piégeur de ROS (MPG). Résultats : L'anoxie et la réoxygénation entraînaient des arythmies (essentiellement d'origine auriculaire) semblables à celles observées chez l'adulte, des troubles de la conduction (blocs auriculo-ventriculaires de 1er, 2ème et 3ème degré) et un ralentissement marqué du couplage excitation-contraction (E-C) ventriculaire. En plus de ces arythmies, la réoxygénation déclenchait le phénomène de Wenckelbach, de rares échappements ventriculaires et une sidération myocardique. Aucune fibrillation, conduction rétrograde ou activité ectopique n'ont été observées. Le NO exogène améliorait la récupération postanoxique du couplage E-C ventriculaire alors que L'inhibition des NOS la ralentissait. L'activation des canaux mito KATP augmentait la production mitochondriale de ROS à la réoxygénation et accélérait la récupération de la conduction (intervalle PR) et du couplage E-C ventriculaire. La protection de ce couplage était abolie par le MPG, la chélérythrine ou le L-NAME. Les fonctions électrique et contractile de tous les coeurs récupéraient après 30-40 min de réoxygénation. L'activité de ERK et de JNK n'était pas modifiée par L'anoxie, mais doublait et quadruplait, respectivement, après 30 min de réoxygénation. Seule l'activité de JNK était diminuée (-60%) par l'activation des canaux mitoKATP. Cet effet inhibiteur était partiellement abolit par le 5-HD. Conclusion: Dans le coeur immature, le couplage E-C ventriculaire semble être un paramètre particulièrement sensible aux conditions d'oxygénation. Sa récupération postanoxique est améliorée par l'ouverture des canaux mitoKATP via une signalisation impliquant les ROS Ies PKC et le NO. Une réduction de l'activité de JNK semble également participer à cette protection. Nos résultats suggèrent que les mitochondries jouent un rôle central dans la modulation des voies de signalisation cellulaire, en particulier lorsque les conditions métaboliques deviennent défavorables. Le coeur embryonnaire isolé représente donc un modèle expérimental utile pour mieux comprendre les mécanismes associés à une hypoxie in utero et pour améliorer les stratégies thérapeutiques en cardiologie et chirurgie foetales. ABSTRACT Physiopathology of the anoxic-reoxygenated embryonic heart: Protective role of NO and KATP channel Aim: In the adult heart, the electrical, mechanical, biochemical and structural disturbances induced by ischemia and reperfusion lead to reversible or irreversible damages depending on the severity and duration of ischemia. In spite of recent advances in fetal cardiology and surgery, little is known regarding the cellular mechanisms involved in hypoxia-induced dysfunction in the developing heart. The aim of this study was to precisely characterize the chrono-, dromo- and inotropic disturbances associated with anoxia-reoxygenation in an embryonic heart model. Furthermore, the roles that nitric oxide (NO), reactive oxygen species (ROS), mitochondrial KATP, (mito KATP) channel and MAP Kinases could play in the stressed developing heart have been investigated. Methods: Embryonic chick hearts (4-day-old) were isolated and submitted in vitro to 30 min anoxia followed by 60 min reoxygenation. Electrical (ECG) and contractile activities of atria, ventricle and conotruncus (photometric detection), ROS production (DCFH fluorescence) and ERK and JNK activity were determined in the ventricle throughout anoxia-reoxygenation. Hearts were treated with NO synthase inhibitor (L-NAME), NO donor (DETA-NONOate), mitoKATP channel opener (diazoxide) or blocket (5-HD), PKC inhibitor (chelerythrine) and ROS scavenger (MPG). Results: Anoxia and reoxygenation provoked arrhythxnias (mainly originating from atrial region), troubles of conduction (st, 2nd, and 3rd degree atrio-ventricular blocks) and disturbances of excitation-contraction (E-C) coupling. In addition to these types of arrhythmias, reoxygenation triggered Wenckebach phenomenon and rare ventricular escape beats. No fibrillations, no ventricular ectopic beats and no electromechanical dissociation were observed. Myocardial stunning was observed during the first 30 min of reoxygenation. All hearts fully recovered their electrical and mechanical functions after 30-40 min of reoxygenation. Exogenous NO improved while NOS inhibition delayed E-C coupling recovery. Mito KATP, channel opening increased reoxygenation-induced ROS production and improved E-C coupling and conduction (PR) recovery. MPG, chelerythrine or L-NAME reversed this effect. Reoxygenation increased ERK and JNK activities land 4-fold, respectively, while anoxia had no effect. MitoKATP channel opening abolished the reoxygenation-induced activation of JNK but had no effect on ERK activity. This inhibitory effect was partly reversed by mitoKATP channel blocker but not by MPG. Conclusion: In the developing heart, ventricular E-C coupling was found to be specially sensitive to hypoxia-reoxygenation and its postanoxic recovery was improved by mitoKATP channel activation via a ROS-, PKC- and NO-dependent pathway. JNK inhibition appears to be involved in this protection. Thus, mitochondria can play a pivotal role in the cellular signalling pathways, notably under critical metabolic conditions. The model of isolated embryonic heart appears to be useful to better understand the mechanisms underlying the myocardial dysfunction induced by an in utero hypoxia and to improve therapeutic strategies in fetal cardiology and surgery.

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OBJECTIVES: To define properly the consequences of oxygen deprivation and readmission for the functioning of the developing heart. METHODS: Spontaneously beating hearts excised from three-day-old chick embryos were loaded with a drop of viscous nontoxic silicone oil and cultured in a special chamber in which variations of PO2 at the tissue level could be strictly controlled. All parts of the hearts were simultaneously submitted to identical changes in PO2. Instantaneous heart rate, myocardial shortening, velocities of contraction and relaxation, and mechanical propagation along the heart tube were determined photometrically. RESULTS: The hearts, submitted to a PO2 ramp (0 to 9.3 kPa) or absolute anoxia, reacted rapidly, reversibly and reproducibly. Under sustained anoxia, ventricular activity stopped after 3.8±0.7 mins (n=4) and then resumed intermittently in the form of tachycardic bursts. Brief anoxia (1 min) provoked tachycardia followed by bradycardia, induced contracture, depressed contractility and retarded atrioventricular propagation. Upon reoxygenation, ventricular contractions ceased suddently for 20±11 s (n=5), whereas a residual atrial activity could persist. The duration of this arrest and the rate of recovery depended on duration of the preceding anoxia. Such a dysfunction constitutes the embryonic analogue of the oxygen paradox observed in adult hearts. Initial impulses, including arrhythmic activity, originated exclusively from the atrium, and no ventricular ectopic beats were detected whatever the conditions of oxygenation. CONCLUSIONS: This in vitro model seems promising for studying the pathophysiological mechanisms associated with hypoxia and reoxygenation in the developing heart.

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Brain spectrin is one of the major cytoskeletal proteins associated with the plasma membrane. In many tissues this protein occurs in a variety of isoforms, for which at least three have been described in the brain: i) brain spectrin 240/235 is localized in neurons most prominently in axons and is present early during brain development. ii) Brain spectrin 240/235E is immunologicaly related to erythrocyte spectrin and restricted to somato-dendritic regions in neurons and to glia. It appears late in brain development. iii) A third form, brain spectrin 240/ 235A, is found exclusively in astrocytes. In this study we have investigated the appearance and distribution of brain spectrins 240/235 and 240/235E during embryonic chick dorsal root ganglia development in vivo and in vitro. This system provides a unique model due to the lack of dendrites on developing sensory neurons. Both isoforms first appeared at embryonic day 6. Brain spectrin 240/235 increased transiently around embryonic day 10 and 14, and was first expressed in ventrolateral neurons. It was localized abundantly in perikarya and their axons. This somato-axonal distribution pattern found in situ was also observed in vitro. In contrast, brain spectrin 240/235E only slightly increased between E6 and E15 and remained unchanged thereafter. It was localized mainly in small neurons of the mediodorsal area, where it was found as punctate staining in the cytoplasm, forming first a nuclear cap and in subsequent stages becoming distributed evenly throughout cytoplasm. This brain spectrin isoform was absent from axons, both in situ and in vitro. In conclusion, this study suggests i) that brain spectrin 240/235 may contribute towards the outgrowth, elongation and possibly maintenance of axonal processes, ii) that brain spcctrin 240/235E could be involved in the stablization of the cytoarchilecture of cell bodies in a sclected population of ganglion cells, and iii) that isoform expression of brain spectrin 240/235E in DRG cells may depend on environmental factors.

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A method has been developed for the determination of the oxygen uptake of small areas (0.01 mm2) in an entire chick embryo cultured in vitro under defined metabolic conditions. It is based on the recordings of the spectral changes of the hemoglobin used as oxygen source for the respiring tissue (Barzu and Borza, 1967). Rapid scanning of the hemoglobin absorbance over the preparation allows a comparison of the O2 uptake of various regions. Values of the order of 10(-2) 1 O2 . min-2 are measured in less than 10 sec with a spatial resolution of 100 micron. The differentiation of embryonic tissue is not disturbed by the measurements. The O2 diffusion in the media and in the tissue has been analyzed by digital simulation. The O2 uptake of the Hensen's node was measured from embryos starting at the stage of definitive primitive streak (stage 4) up to the stage of 10 somites. It increases from 0.6 to 1.1 nl . h-1 with a marked acceleration between stages 4 and 5. The values corrected for the protein content of the Hensen's node at stage 4, 5, 6 and 8 are 32, 30 and 28 microliter . mg-1 . h-1 respectively. The first scanning results show different patterns of the O2 utake at the level of the Hensen's node and of the neural plate. At stage 6-7, the corrected O2 uptake is 30 microliter . mg-1 . h-1 for . the former and 43 microliter . mg-1 . h-1 for the latter.

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The distribution of the fibronectin-rich extracellular matrix (ECM) in the chick embryo during formation of the blastula has been evaluated semiquantitatively using an electron microscopical immunogold staining technique. During the first 10 h of postlaying development, fibronectin was found in both embryonic area pellucida and extra-embryonic area opaca of the blastoderm. In the area pellucida, the fibronectin was (1) associated with the basal lamina of the epiblast, (2) present between epiblastic and hypoblastic cells and (3) occasionally internalized in hypoblastic cells. Along the embryonic axis, a transient and high density of ECM was associated with the front of the anteriorly and rapidly expanding hypoblast. Very high density of fibronectin was observed in the marginal zone of the area pellucida, where the epiblastic and deeper cell layers show contacts and intense re-arrangements. In the area opaca, fibronectin was at first found only sporadically between contacting cells, but its density increased steadily and markedly during the first day of development. These rapid and significant changes in the regional distribution of fibronectin-rich ECM are discussed with respect to the early morphogenesis of the chick embryo.

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Cardiac morphogenesis and function are known to depend on both aerobic and anaerobic energy-producing pathways. However, the relative contribution of mitochondrial oxidation and glycogenolysis, as well as the determining factors of oxygen demand in the distinct chambers of the embryonic heart, remains to be investigated. Spontaneously beating hearts isolated from stage 11, 20, and 24HH chick embryos were maintained in vitro under controlled metabolic conditions. O(2) uptake and glycogenolytic rate were determined in atrium, ventricle, and conotruncus in the absence or presence of glucose. Oxidative capacity ranged from 0.2 to 0.5 nmol O(2)/(h.microg protein), did not depend on exogenous glucose, and was the highest in atria at stage 20HH. However, the highest reserves of oxidative capacity, assessed by mitochondrial uncoupling, were found at the youngest stage and in conotruncus, representing 75 to 130% of the control values. At stage 24HH, glycogenolysis in glucose-free medium was 0.22, 0.17, and 0.04 nmol glucose U(h.microg protein) in atrium, ventricle, and conotruncus, respectively. Mechanical loading of the ventricle increased its oxidative capacity by 62% without altering glycogenolysis or lactate production. Blockade of glycolysis by iodoacetate suppressed lactate production but modified neither O(2) nor glycogen consumption in substrate-free medium. These findings indicate that atrium is the cardiac chamber that best utilizes its oxidative and glycogenolytic capacities and that ventricular wall stretch represents an early and major determinant of the O(2) uptake. Moreover, the fact that O(2) and glycogen consumptions were not affected by inhibition of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase provides indirect evidence for an active glycerol-phosphate shuttle in the embryonic cardiomyocytes.

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BACKGROUND/AIM: Excitation-contraction coupling is modulated by nitric oxide (NO) which otherwise has either beneficial or detrimental effects on myocardial function during hypoxia-reoxygenation. This work aimed at characterizing the variations of electromechanical delay (EMD) induced by anoxia-reoxygenation within the developing heart and determining whether atrial and ventricular EMD are modulated by NO to the same extent. METHODS: Hearts of 4 or 4.5-day-old chick embryos were excised and submitted in vitro to normoxia (45 min), anoxia (30 min) and reoxygenation (60 min). Electrocardiogram and atrial and ventricular contractions were simultaneously recorded throughout experiment. Anoxia-reoxygenation-induced chrono-, dromo-and inotropic disturbances and changes in EMD in atrium (EMDa) and ventricle (EMDv) were investigated in control hearts and in hearts exposed to 0.1, 1, 10, 50 and 100 microM of DETA-NONOate (a NO donating agent) or to 50 microM of L-NAME (a NOS inhibitor). RESULTS: Under normoxia, heart rate, PR interval, ventricular shortening velocity, EMDa and EMDv were similar in control, L-NAME-treated and DETA-NONOate-treated hearts. Under anoxia, cardiac activity became markedly erratic within less than 10 min in all groups. At the onset of reoxygenation, EMDv was increased by about 300% with respect to the preanoxic value while EMDa did not vary significatively. Compared to control conditions, L-NAME or DETA-NONOate had no influence on the negative chrono-, dromo- and inotropic effects induced by anoxia-reoxygenation. However, L-NAME prolonged EMDv during anoxia and delayed EMDv recovery during reoxygenation while 100 microM DETA-NONOate had the opposite effects. EMDa was neither affected by NOS inhibitor nor NO donor. At the end of reoxygenation, all the investigated parameters returned to their basal values. CONCLUSION: This work provides evidence that a NO-dependent pathway is involved in regulation of the ventricular excitation-contraction coupling in the anoxic-reoxygenated developing heart.

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Akt/protein kinase B (PKB) plays a critical role in the regulation of metabolism, transcription, cell migration, cell cycle progression, and cell survival. The existence of viable knockout mice for each of the three isoforms suggests functional redundancy. We generated mice with combined mutant alleles of Akt1 and Akt3 to study their effects on mouse development. Here we show that Akt1-/- Akt3+/- mice display multiple defects in the thymus, heart, and skin and die within several days after birth, while Akt1+/- Akt3-/- mice survive normally. Double knockout (Akt1-/-) Akt3-/-) causes embryonic lethality at around embryonic days 11 and 12, with more severe developmental defects in the cardiovascular and nervous systems. Increased apoptosis was found in the developing brain of double mutant embryos. These data indicate that the Akt1 gene is more essential than Akt3 for embryonic development and survival but that both are required for embryo development. Our results indicate isoform-specific and dosage-dependent effects of Akt on animal survival and development.

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Signal transduction modulates expression and activity of cholesterol transporters. We recently demonstrated that the Ras/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling cascade regulates protein stability of Scavenger Receptor BI (SR-BI) through Proliferator Activator Receptor (PPARα) -dependent degradation pathways. In addition, MAPK (Mek/Erk 1/2) inhibition has been shown to influence liver X receptor (LXR) -inducible ATP Binding Cassette (ABC) transporter ABCA1 expression in macrophages. Here we investigated if Ras/MAPK signaling could alter expression and activity of ABCA1 and ABCG1 in steroidogenic and hepatic cell lines. We demonstrate that in Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) cells and human hepatic HuH7 cells, extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 (Erk1/2) inhibition reduces PPARα-inducible ABCA1 protein levels, while ectopic expression of constitutively active H-Ras, K-Ras and MAPK/Erk kinase 1 (Mek1) increases ABCA1 protein expression, respectively. Furthermore, Mek1/2 inhibitors reduce ABCG1 protein levels in ABCG1 overexpressing CHO cells (CHO-ABCG1) and human embryonic kidney 293 (HEK293) cells treated with LXR agonist. This correlates with Mek1/2 inhibition reducing ABCG1 cell surface expression and decreasing cholesterol efflux onto High Density Lipoproteins (HDL). Real Time reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and protein turnover studies reveal that Mek1/2 inhibitors do not target transcriptional regulation of ABCA1 and ABCG1, but promote ABCA1 and ABCG1 protein degradation in HuH7 and CHO cells, respectively. In line with published data from mouse macrophages, blocking Mek1/2 activity upregulates ABCA1 and ABCG1 protein levels in human THP1 macrophages, indicating opposite roles for the Ras/MAPK pathway in the regulation of ABC transporter activity in macrophages compared to steroidogenic and hepatic cell types. In summary, this study suggests that Ras/MAPK signaling modulates PPARα- and LXR-dependent protein degradation pathways in a cell-specific manner to regulate the expression levels of ABCA1 and ABCG1 transporters.

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During the ontogenesis of dorsal root ganglia (DRG), the immunoreactivity to substance P (SP) and calbindin D-28k (CaBP) appears in chickens at embryonic day 5 (E5) and E10 respectively. To establish the birthdates of primary sensory neurons expressing SP or CaBP, chick embryos were given repetitive intra-amniotic injections of [3H]-thymidine. The neuroblasts giving rise to SP-expressing neurons were labeled up to E6 while those generating CaBP-immunoreactive neurons stopped to incorporate [3H]-thymidine before E5.5. This finding indicates that neurons exhibiting distinct phenotypes may originate from neuroblasts which arrest to proliferate at close but distinct stages of development. To determine whether SP and CaBP are co-expressed or not in DRG neurons, chick embryos at E12, E18, and chickens two weeks after hatching were perfused and fixed to detect simultaneously SP- and CaBP-immunoreactivity in DRG sections. The results showed that SP and CaBP were transiently co-expressed by a subset of neurons at E12. Later, however, the SP-immunoreactivity was gradually lost by these ganglion cells, so that the SP- and CaBP-immunoreaction defined two distinct neuronal subpopulations after hatching. In conclusion, most CaBP-immunoreactive DRG cells derive from a subset of neurons in which SP and CaBP are transiently co-localized.