65 resultados para aristolactam AII
Resumo:
Amakrinzellen sind hemmende Interneurone der Netzhaut. Sie exprimieren erregende, ionotrope Glutamat-Rezeptoren und hemmende Glyzin- bzw. GABA-Rezeptoren. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden die Glyzinrezeptoren von Amakrinzellen mit Hilfe der „Patch Clamp“ Technik in Wildtyp- und Glyzin-Rezeptor Knock-out-Mäusen (Glra1spd-ot, Glra2-/-, Glra3-/-) untersucht. In Schnitten und Ganzpräparaten von akut isolierten Netzhäuten wurden Glyzin-induzierte und spontane inhibitorische postsynaptische Ströme (sIPSCs) gemessen. Die Untersuchungen beschränkten sich auf eine Gruppe von Amakrinzellen, die sich durch ein relativ kleines Dendritenfeld auszeichnen, das alle Schichten der IPL durchzieht. Dabei wurden die Ströme von zwei Typen von Amakrinzellen, den AII-Zellen und den NF-Zellen, miteinander verglichen. Alle untersuchten Amakrinzellen reagierten mit einem Stromfluss über die Membran, wenn Glyzin appliziert wurde. Bei AII-Zellen war die Amplitude des Stromes bei der Glra3-/--Maus um etwa 50 % reduziert, während bei den anderen Mauslinien kein Unterschied zum Wildtyp festgestellt wurde. Bei NF-Zellen wurde nur ein geringer Unterschied der Stromamplituden zwischen Wildtyp und Mutanten gefunden. Er war am deutlichsten bei der Glra2-/--Maus. Picrotoxinin ist ein effektiver Antagonist von homomeren Glyzinrezeptoren, während heteromere Glyzinrezeptoren relativ unempfindlich sind. Die Wirkung von Picrotoxinin war bei allen untersuchten Zellen ähnlich und reduzierte die Glyzinantwort um etwa 25 - 30 %. Dieser Effekt war unabhängig von der Mauslinie. Amakrinzellen exprimieren also zum Großteil heteromere Rezeptoren Zur Untersuchung der synaptischen Glyzinrezeptoren der Amakrinzellen wurden die spontanen inhibitorischen postsynaptischen Ströme dieser Zellen gemessen und deren Amplituden und Kinetiken bestimmt. Dabei unterschieden sich die Zeitkonstanten der Deaktivierungs/Desensitivierungskinetik (τw) von AII- und NF-Zellen, wohingegen die Aktivierungszeit nicht voneinander abwich. Spontane IPSCs, die von AII-Amakrinzellen abgeleitet wurden, hatten eine mittlere Zeitkonstante von τ = 11 ms und streuten zwischen 5 und 30 ms. Die Zeitkonstanten der sIPSCs von NF-Amakrinzellen lagen zwischen 10 und 50 ms und wiesen eine mittlere Zeitkonstante von τw = 27 ms auf. Die unterschiedlichen Zeitkonstanten spiegeln die Zusammensetzung der α-Untereinheiten des Glyzinrezeptors wider. AII-Zellen in der Glra1-/-- und in der Glra2-/--Maus hatten vergleichbare Zeitkonstanten wie die AII-Zellen im Wildtyp. Bei der Glra3-/--Maus konnten bei 50 untersuchten AII-Amakrinzellen keine sIPSCs gemessen werden. Dies und die Ergebnisse der Glyzin-induzierten Ströme von AII-Zellen lassen darauf schließen, dass die glyzinergen Synapsen dieser Zellen bevorzugt die α3-Untereinheit enthalten. Bei NF-Amakrinzellen konnte kein Unterschied zwischen Wildtyp-, Glra1spd-ot- und Glra3-/--Mäusen festgestellt werden. Dagegen zeigten die sIPSCs der NF-Amakrinzellen der Glra2-/--Maus signifikant längere Zeitkonstanten. Der Mittelwert verlängerte sich von 27 ms auf 69 ms und es war eine breitere Streuung mit Zeitkonstanten zwischen 15 und 200 ms zu sehen. Die glyzinergen Synapsen der NF-Zellen enthalten vor allem die α2-Untereinheit des Glyzinrezeptors. Die Zeitkonstanten der sIPSCs sind unabhängig von der Verteilung ihrer jeweiligen Amplituden, und zwischen Wildtyp- und KO-Mäusen wurden keine Unterschiede in den Amplituden der sIPSCs beobachtet. Während der Untersuchungen wurden sporadisch noch weitere Amakrinzellen, vor allem „widefield“- (WF) Zellen abgeleitet. Die Verteilungen der Zeitkonstanten der sIPSCs dieser Zellen streuten zwischen 8 und über 100 ms. Dabei wurden Zeitkonstanten gemessen, die noch langsamer waren als die von NF-Amakrinzellen und bei einigen WF-Zellen wurden mittlere Zeitkonstanten von mehr als 50 ms beobachtet. Diese Ergebnisse zeigen, dass unterschiedliche Klassen von Amakrinzellen verschiedene α-Untereinheiten des Glyzinrezeptors in den Synapsen exprimieren. Dies hat Auswirkung auf die Kinetik der glyzinergen Hemmung bei diesen Zellen und lässt darauf schließen, dass sie bei der zeitlichen Modulation der Lichtsignale unterschiedliche Aufgaben haben.
Resumo:
Gap junctions between neurons form the structural substrate for electrical synapses. Connexin 36 (Cx36, and its non-mammalian ortholog connexin 35) is the major neuronal gap junction protein in the central nervous system (CNS), and contributes to several important neuronal functions including neuronal synchronization, signal averaging, network oscillations, and motor learning. Connexin 36 is strongly expressed in the retina, where it is an obligatory component of the high-sensitivity rod photoreceptor pathway. A fundamental requirement of the retina is to adapt to broadly varying inputs in order to maintain a dynamic range of signaling output. Modulation of the strength of electrical coupling between networks of retinal neurons, including the Cx36-coupled AII amacrine cell in the primary rod circuit, is a hallmark of retinal luminance adaptation. However, very little is known about the mechanisms regulating dynamic modulation of Cx36-mediated coupling. The primary goal of this work was to understand how cellular signaling mechanisms regulate coupling through Cx36 gap junctions. We began by developing and characterizing phospho-specific antibodies against key regulatory phosphorylation sites on Cx36. Using these tools we showed that phosphorylation of Cx35 in fish models varies with light adaptation state, and is modulated by acute changes in background illumination. We next turned our focus to the well-studied and readily identifiable AII amacrine cell in mammalian retina. Using this model we showed that increased phosphorylation of Cx36 is directly related to increased coupling through these gap junctions, and that the dopamine-stimulated uncoupling of the AII network is mediated by dephosphorylation of Cx36 via protein kinase A-stimulated protein phosphatase 2A activity. We then showed that increased phosphorylation of Cx36 on the AII amacrine network is driven by depolarization of presynaptic ON-type bipolar cells as well as background light increments. This increase in phosphorylation is mediated by activation of extrasynaptic NMDA receptors associated with Cx36 gap junctions on AII amacrine cells and by Ca2+-calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II activation. Finally, these studies indicated that coupling is regulated locally at individual gap junction plaques. This work provides a framework for future study of regulation of Cx36-mediated coupling, in which increased phosphorylation of Cx36 indicates increased neuronal coupling.
Resumo:
Small bistratified cells (SBCs) in the primate retina carry a major blue-yellow opponent signal to the brain. We found that SBCs also carry signals from rod photoreceptors, with the same sign as S cone input. SBCs exhibited robust responses under low scotopic conditions. Physiological and anatomical experiments indicated that this rod input arose from the AII amacrine cell-mediated rod pathway. Rod and cone signals were both present in SBCs at mesopic light levels. These findings have three implications. First, more retinal circuits may multiplex rod and cone signals than were previously thought to, efficiently exploiting the limited number of optic nerve fibers. Second, signals from AII amacrine cells may diverge to most or all of the approximately 20 retinal ganglion cell types in the peripheral primate retina. Third, rod input to SBCs may be the substrate for behavioral biases toward perception of blue at mesopic light levels.
Resumo:
Many cell types in the retina are coupled via gap junctions and so there is a pressing need for a potent and reversible gap junction antagonist. We screened a series of potential gap junction antagonists by evaluating their effects on dye coupling in the network of A-type horizontal cells. We evaluated the following compounds: meclofenamic acid (MFA), mefloquine, 2-aminoethyldiphenyl borate (2-APB), 18-alpha-glycyrrhetinic acid, 18-beta-glycyrrhetinic acid (18-beta-GA), retinoic acid, flufenamic acid, niflumic acid, and carbenoxolone. The efficacy of each drug was determined by measuring the diffusion coefficient for Neurobiotin (Mills & Massey, 1998). MFA, 18-beta-GA, 2-APB and mefloquine were the most effective antagonists, completely eliminating A-type horizontal cell coupling at a concentration of 200 muM. Niflumic acid, flufenamic acid, and carbenoxolone were less potent. Additionally, carbenoxolone was difficult to wash out and also may be harmful, as the retina became opaque and swollen. MFA, 18-beta-GA, 2-APB and mefloquine also blocked coupling in B-type horizontal cells and AII amacrine cells. Because these cell types express different connexins, this suggests that the antagonists were relatively non-selective across several different types of gap junction. It should be emphasized that MFA was water-soluble and its effects on dye coupling were easily reversible. In contrast, the other gap junction antagonists, except carbenoxolone, required DMSO to make stock solutions and were difficult to wash out of the preparation at the doses required to block coupling in A-type HCs. The combination of potency, water solubility and reversibility suggest that MFA may be a useful compound to manipulate gap junction coupling.
Resumo:
Glomerular mesangial cells (MC) are renal vascular cells that regulate the surface area of glomerular capillaries and thus, partly control glomerular filtration rate. Clarification of the signal transduction pathways and ionic mechanisms modulating MC tone are critical to understanding the physiology and pathophysiology of these cells, and the integrative role these cells play in fluid and electrolyte homeostasis. The patch clamp technique and an assay of cell concentration were used to electrophysiologically and pharmacologically analyze the ion channels of the plasmalemmal of human glomerular MC maintained in tissue culture. Moreover, the signal transduction pathways modulating channels involved in relaxation were investigated. Three distinct K$\sp+$-selective channels were identified: two low conductance channels (9 and 65pS) maintained MC at rest, while a larger conductance (206pS) K$\sp+$ channel was quiescent at rest. This latter channel was pharmacologically and biophysically similar to the large, Ca$\sp{2+}$-activated K$\sp+$ channel (BK$\rm\sb{Ca}$) identified in smooth muscle. BK$\rm\sb{Ca}$ played an essential role in relaxation of MC. In cell-attached patches, the open probability (P$\rm\sb{o}$) of BK$\rm\sb{Ca}$ increased from a basal level of $<$0.05 to 0.22 in response to AII (100nM)-induced mobilization of cytosolic Ca$\sp{2+}$. Activation in response to contractile signals (membrane depolarization and Ca$\sp{2+}$ mobilization) suggests that BK$\rm\sb{Ca}$ acts as a low gain feedback regulator of contraction. Atrial natriuretic factor (ANF; 1.0$\mu$M) and nitroprusside (NP; 0.1mM), via the second messenger, cGMP, increase the feedback gain of BK$\rm\sb{Ca}$. In cell-attached patches bathed with physiological saline, these agents transiently activated BK$\rm\sb{Ca}$ from a basal $\rm P\sb{o}<0.05$ to peak responses near 0.50. As membrane potential hyperpolarizes towards $\rm E\sb{K}$ (2-3 minutes), BK$\rm\sb{Ca}$ inactivates. Upon depolarizing V$\rm\sb{m}$ with 140 mM KCl, db-cGMP (10$\mu$M) activated BK$\rm\sb{Ca}$ to a sustained P$\rm\sb{o}$ = 0.51. Addition of AII in the presence of cGMP further increased P$\rm\sb{o}$ to 0.82. Activation of BK$\rm\sb{Ca}$ by cGMP occured via an endogenous cGMP-dependent protein kinase (PKG): in excised, inside-out patches, PKG in the presence of Mg-ATP (0.1mM) and cGMP increased P$\rm\sb{o}$ from 0.07 to 0.39. In contrast, neither PKC nor PKA influenced BK$\rm\sb{Ca}$. Endogenous okadaic acid-sensitive protein phosphatase suppressed BK$\rm\sb{Ca}$ activity. Binning the change in P$\rm\sb{o}\ (\Delta P\sb{o}$) of BK$\rm\sb{Ca}$ in response to PKG (n = 69) established two distinct populations of channels: one that responded ($\cong$67%, $\rm\Delta P\sb{o} = 0.45 \pm 0.03$) and one that was unresponsive ($\Delta\rm P\sb{o} = 0.00 \pm 0.01$) to PKG. Activation of BK$\rm\sb{Ca}$ by PKG resulted from a decrease in the Ca$\sp{2+}$- and voltage-activation thresholds independent of sensitivities. In conclusion, mesangial BK$\rm\sb{Ca}$ channels sense both electrical and chemical signals of contraction and act as feedback regulators by repolarizing the plasma membrane. ANF and NO, via cGMP, stimulate endogenous PKG, which subsequently decreases the activation threshold of BK$\rm\sb{Ca}$ to increase the gain of this feedback regulatory signal. ^
Resumo:
Retinal ganglion cells carry signals from the eye to the brain. One of the most common types of ganglion cells is parasol cells. They have larger dendritic trees, somas and axons than other ganglion cells. While much was known about parasol cell light responses, little was known about how these responses are formed. One possibility is that they receive input from a unique set of local circuit neurons that have similar responses. The goal was to identify these presynaptic neurons and study their synaptic connectivity.^ Ganglion cells receive input from bipolar and amacrine cells, but there are numerous subtypes of each. To determine which of these were most likely to provide input to parasol cells, the parasol cells were intracellularly-injected and then various bipolar and amacrine cells were immunolabeled and the tissue analyzed using a confocal microscope. DB3 bipolar cells labeled with antibodies to calbindin made extensive contacts with OFF parasol cells. Antibodies to recover in labeled flat midget bipolar cells (FMB). They made only random contacts with OFF parasol cells, and they are not expected to provide significant input. Type DB2 bipolar cells and FMB cells labeled with antibodies to excitatory amino acid transporter-2 made extensive contacts with OFF parasol cells. This suggests that DB2 bipolar cells are likely to provide input to parasol cells.^ Two types of amacrine cells were labeled in material containing injected parasol cells. Cholinergic amacrine cells were labeled with antibodies to choline acetyltransferase, and they made extensive contacts with ON parasol cells. The large amacrine cells labeled with antibodies to a precursor of cholecystokinin were among the amacrine cells that are tracer-coupled to parasol cells.^ From electron microscopic (EM) analysis, most of the synapses made by DB3 axons were found on varicosities. Some postsynaptic and presynaptic amacrine cells resembled AII amacrine cells. Others were relatively electron-lucent and may be cholinergic amacrine cells or cholecystokinin-containing amacrine cells. Gap junctions were found between neighboring DB3 axons. They occurred whenever two axons contacted each other, and the junctions were as large as the area of contact. In double-label EM experiments, DB3 axons made synapses onto OFF parasol cells. ^
Resumo:
Many neurons in the mammalian retina are electrically coupled by intercellular channels or gap junctions, which are assembled from a family of proteins called connexins. Numerous studies indicate that gap junctions differ in properties such as conductance and tracer permeability. For example, A-type horizontal cell gap junctions are permeable to Lucifer Yellow, but B-type horizontal cell gap junctions are not. This suggests the two cell types express different connexins. My hypothesis is that multiple neuronal connexins are expressed in the mammalian retina in a cell type specific manner. Immunohistochemical techniques and confocal microscopy were used to localize certain connexins within well-defined neuronal circuits. The results of this study can be summarized as follows: AII amacrine cells, which receive direct input from rod bipolar cells, are well-coupled to neighboring AIIs. In addition, AII amacrine cells also form gap junctions with ON cone bipolar cells. This is a complex heterocellular network. In both rabbit and primate retina, connexin36 occurs at dendritic crossings in the AII matrix as well as between AIIs and ON cone bipolar cells. Coupling in the AII network is thought to reduce noise in the rod pathway while AII/bipolar gap junctions are required for the transmission of rod signals to ON ganglion cells. In the outer plexiform layer, connexin36 forms gap junctions between cones and between rods and cones via cone telodendria. Cone to cone coupling is thought to reduce noise and is partly color selective. Rod to cone coupling forms an alternative rod pathway thought to operate at intermediate light intensity. A-type horizontal cells in the rabbit retina are strongly coupled via massive low resistance gap junctions composed from Cx50. Coupling dramatically extends the receptive field of horizontal cells and the modulation of coupling is thought to change the strength of the feedback signal from horizontal cells to cones. Finally, there are other coupled networks, such as B-type horizontal cells and S1/S2 amacrine cells, which do not use either connexin36 or Cx50. These results confirm the hypothesis that multiple neuronal connexins are expressed in the mammalian retina and these connexins are localized to particular retinal circuits. ^
Resumo:
We compared the suitability of two skeletal materials of the Atlantic brain coral Diploria strigosa for 230Th/U-dating: the commonly used bulk material comprising all skeletal elements and the denser theca wall material. Eight fossil corals of presumably Last Interglacial age from Bonaire, southern Caribbean Sea, were investigated, and several sub-samples were dated from each coral. For four corals, both the ages and the activity ratios of the bulk material and theca wall agree within uncertainty. Three corals show significantly older ages for their bulk material than for their theca wall material as well as substantially elevated 232Th content and (230Th/238U) ratios. The bulk material samples of another coral show younger ages and lower (230Th/238U) ratios than the corresponding theca wall samples. This coral also contains a considerable amount of 232Th. The application of the available open-system models developed to account for post-depositional diagenetic effects in corals shows that none of the models can successfully be applied to the Bonaire corals. The most likely explanation for this observation is that the assumptions of the models are not fulfilled by our data set. Comparison of the theca wall and bulk material data enables us to obtain information about the open-system processes that affected the corals. The corals showing apparently older ages for their bulk material were probably affected by contamination with a secondary (detrital) phase. The most likely source of the detrital material is carbonate sand. The higher (230Th/232Th) ratio of this material implies that detrital contamination would have a much stronger impact on the ages than a contaminant with a bulk Earth (230Th/232Th) ratio and that the threshold for the commonly applied 232Th reliability criterion would be much lower than the generally used value of 1 ng g^-1. The coral showing apparently younger ages for its bulk material was probably influenced by more than one diagenetic process. A potential scenario is a combination of detrital contamination and U addition by secondary pore infillings. Our results show that the dense theca wall material of D. strigosa is generally less affected by post-depositional open-system behaviour and better suited for 230Th/U-dating than the bulk material. This is also obvious from the fact that all ages of theca wall material reflect a Last Interglacial origin (~125 ka), whereas the bulk material samples are either substantially older or younger. However, for some corals, the 230Th/U-ages and activity ratios of the bulk material and the theca wall samples are similar. This shows that strictly reliable 230Th/U-ages can also be obtained from bulk material samples of exceptionally well-preserved corals. However, the bulk material samples more frequently show elevated activity ratios and ages than the corresponding theca wall samples. Our findings should be generally applicable to brain corals (Mussidae) that are found in tropical oceans worldwide and may enable reliable 230Th/U-dating of fossil corals with similar skeletal architecture, even if their bulk skeleton is altered by diagenesis. The 230Th/U-ages we consider reliable (120-130 ka), along with a recently published age of 118 ka, provide the first comprehensive dating of the elevated lower reef terrace at Bonaire (118-130 ka), which is in agreement in timing and duration with other Last Interglacial records.
Resumo:
it's been 50years since the world witnessed the triumph of one of the iast revoiutíons of the twentieth-century starring a group of bearded men who descended from the mountains of Cuba and who wouid end up overthrowing the Batista regime. Ricardo Porro was a Cuban architect exiied for his revoiutionary ideais. Vittorio Garatti and Roberto Gottardi were itaiian immigrant architects. The three coincided in the effervescent city of Caracas in the iate 50's within the circie of friends of Carios Raui de Viiianueva, who had at that tí me, finished one of his most significant works, the City University of Caracas. United by a common circie of friends, they wouid soon receive their dream assignment: an Academy ofArt for the chiidren of workers in the revoiutionary Havana. The idea was directiy based on the triumphant ideoiogist of the revoiutíon: Fidei Castro and Che Guevara. Aii schoois had to represent the image of the new society. They wouid immediateiy depart for Havana. The year was 1961 and they had oniy a few months to pian and carry out the project. The schoois were officiaiiy opened in 1965 without having been compieted. The set was iocated in the Goif Course Country Ciub of Havana. The iands- cape of the goif course and the understanding of the piace, by the three architects, was the origin of the projects. initíaiiy, they worked with some common principies that conditíoned its architecturai answer and gave the group the homogeneity of a singie project: the integratíon with the iandsca- pe, the same constructíon system and a singie materiai. This research anaiyzes the conditíons used by the three architects in order to investígate the responses from the point of view of architecturai design. Han pasado más de 50 años desde que el mundo contempló el triunfo de una de las últimas revoluciones del siglo XX, protagonizada por un grupo de barbudos que descendían de la sierra de Cuba y que acabaría con el derrocamiento del régimen de Batista. Ricardo Porro era un arquitecto cubano exiliado por sus ideales revolucionarios. Vittorio Garatt y Roberto Gottardi eran arquitectos italianos emigrantes. Los tres coincidieron en la efervescente Caracas de Anales de los años 50 en torno a la figura de Carlos Raúl de Villanueva que terminaba en esa época una de sus obras más significativas, la Ciudad Universitaria de Caracas. Unidos por un círculo común de amistades pronto recibirán el encargo soñado: una Academia de las Artes para los hijos de los trabajadores en La Habana revolucionaria. La idea partia directamente de los ideólogos triunfantes de la revolución: Fidel Castro y el Che Guevara. El conjunto de las escuelas tenía que representar la imagen de la nueva sociedad. Inmediatamente partirán rumbo a La Habana. Corría el año 1961 y dispo¬nían de unos pocos meses para proyectar y ejecutar las obras. Las escuelas fueron oficialmente inauguradas en 1965 sin haberse concluido. El conjunto se ubicó en el campo de golf del Country Club de La Habana. El paisaje del campo de golf y el entendimiento del lugar, por parte de los tres arquitectos, fue el origen de los proyectos. Trabajaron inicialmente con unas premisas comunes que condicionaron su respuesta arquitectónica y le dieron al conjunto la homogeneidad de un único proyecto: la integración con el paisaje, un mismo sistema constructivo y un único material. Este trabajo de investigación parte de los condicionantes a los que se enfrentaron los tres arquitectos para así analizar las respuestas dadas desde el punto de vista del proyecto arquitectónico.
Resumo:
The three largest known populations of amacrine cells in the rabbit retina were stained with fluorescent probes in whole mounts and counted at a series of retinal eccentricities. The retinas were counterstained using a fluorescent DNA-binding molecule and the total number of nuclei in the inner nuclear layer were counted in confocal sections. From the total number of inner nuclear layer cells and the known fraction of them occupied by amacrine cells, the fraction of amacrine cells made up by the stained populations could be calculated. Starburst cells made up 3%, indoleamine-accumulating cells made up 4%, and AII cells made up 11% of all amacrine cells. By referring four smaller populations of amacrine cells to the number of indoleamine-accumulating cells, they were estimated to make up 4% of all amacrine cells. Thus, 78% of all amacrine cells in the rabbit’s retina are known only from isolated examples, if at all. This proportion is similar in the retinas of the mouse, cat, and monkey. It is likely that a substantial fraction of the local circuit neurons present in other regions of the central nervous system are also invisible as populations to current techniques.
Resumo:
In bovine adrenal medullary cells synergistically acting type 1 and type 2 angiotensin II (AII) receptors activate the fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF-2) gene through a unique AII-responsive promoter element. Both the type 1 and type 2 AII receptors and the downstream cyclic adenosine 1′,3′-monophosphate- and protein kinase C-dependent signaling pathways activate the FGF-2 promoter through a novel signal-transducing mechanism. This mechanism, which we have named integrative nuclear FGF receptor-1 signaling, involves the nuclear translocation of FGF receptor-1 and its subsequent transactivation of the AII-responsive element in the FGF-2 promoter.
Resumo:
Angiotensin II (AII), acting via its G-protein linked receptor, is an important regulator of cardiac, vascular, and renal function. Following injection of AII into rats, we find that there is also a rapid tyrosine phosphorylation of the major insulin receptor substrates 1 and 2 (IRS-1 and IRS-2) in the heart. This phenomenon appears to involve JAK2 tyrosine kinase, which associates with the AT1 receptor and IRS-1/IRS-2 after AII stimulation. AII-induced phosphorylation leads to binding of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI 3-kinase) to IRS-1 and IRS-2; however, in contrast to other ligands, AII injection results in an acute inhibition of both basal and insulin-stimulated PI 3-kinase activity. The latter occurs without any reduction in insulin receptor or IRS phosphorylation or in the interaction of the p85 and p110 subunits of PI 3-kinase with each other or with IRS-1/IRS-2. These effects of AII are inhibited by AT1 receptor antagonists. Thus, there is direct cross-talk between insulin and AII signaling pathways at the level of both tyrosine phosphorylation and PI 3-kinase activation. These interactions may play an important role in the association of insulin resistance, hypertension, and cardiovascular disease.
Resumo:
trkB is the high-affinity receptor for brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), a trophic molecule with demonstrated effects on the survival and differentiation of a wide variety of neuronal populations. In the mammalian retina, trkB is localized to both ganglion cells and numerous cells in the inner nuclear layer. Much information on the role of BDNF in neuronal development has been derived from the study of trkB- and BDNF-deficient mutant mice. This includes an attenuation of the numbers of cortical neurons immunopositive for the calcium-binding proteins, parvalbumin, and calbindin. Unfortunately, these mutant animals typically fail to survive for > 24-48 hr after birth. Since most retinal neuronal differentiation occurs postnatally, we have devised an alternative scheme to suppress the expression of trkB in the retina to examine the role of BDNF on the postnatal development of neurons of the inner retina. Neonatal rats were treated with intraocular injection of an antisense oligonucleotide (1-2 microliters of 10-100 microM solution) targeted to the trkB mRNA. Immunohistochemistry with a polyclonal antibody to trkB showed that the expression of trkB in retinal neurons was suppressed 48-72 hr following a single injection. Northern blot analysis demonstrated that antisense treatment had no effect on the level of trkB mRNA, even after multiple injections. This suggests an effect of trkB antisense treatment on protein translation, but not on RNA transcription. No alterations were observed in the thickness of retinal cellular or plexiform layers, suggesting that BDNF is not the sole survival factor for these neurons. There were, however, alterations in the patterns of immunostaining for parvalbumin, a marker for the narrow-field, bistratified AII amacrine cell-a central element of the rod (scotopic) pathway. This was evidenced by a decrease in both the number of immunostained somata (> 50%) and in the intensity of immunolabeling. However, the immunostaining pattern of calbindin was not affected. These studies suggest that the ligands for trkB have specific effects on the neurochemical phenotypic expression of inner retinal neurons and in the development of a well-defined retinal circuit.