6 resultados para TRPC2
Resumo:
Chez les mammifères, les phéromones sont des molécules clés dans la régulation des comportements sociaux au sein d'une espèce. Chez la souris, la détection de ces molécules se fait dans l'organe voméronasal (VNO] et implique le canal TRPC2 afin de dépolariser les neurones. Des différences de comportement entre des souris Trpc2-/- et des souris sans VNO suggèrent l'implication d'une autre protéine effectrice dans la voie de signalisation des phéromones. L'hypothèse étant que cette protéine formerait un canal hétéromérique avec TRPC2. CNGA4 est une protéine sans fonction connue dans le VNO des rongeurs. Elle appartient à la famille des protéines CNG qui joue un rôle important dans différentes voies de signalisation comme la vision ou l'olfaction. Etant donné sa présence dans le VNO, son rôle inconnu dans cet organe et son rôle important dans de nombreuses voies de signalisation, nous avons décidé d'étudier CNGA4 afin de connaître sa localisation, ses propriétés ou encore sa structure. Nous avons découvert que CNGA4 est exprimée dans les axons, les neurones immatures ainsi que sur les microvillosités des neurones de VNO. A l'aide de souris portant une version non fonctionnelle de CNGA4, nous avons pu montrer que cette protéine joue un rôle majeur dans la voie de signalisation des phéromones. Ainsi, les neurones du VNO portant une version non fonctionnelle de CNGA4 répondent moins fréquemment aux phéromones et par conséquent les phéromones activent également moins de neurones dans le bulbe olfactif accessoire, premier relais du VNO avec le cortex. Cette détection défaillante se traduit par une absence d'agressivité des souris mutantes ainsi que par une incapacité de ces souris à discriminer le sexe de leur conspécifique. Etant donné les propriétés similaires de CNGA4 et de TRPC2, nous avons supposé que les deux protéines pourraient interagir. Cette hypothèse a été confortée par l'observation que CNGA4 n'est plus exprimée dans les microvillosités du VNO des souris Trpc2-/-. A l'aide d'expériences d'expression hétérologue, nous avons pu observer que les deux protéines interagissent et forment un canal activé par un analogue du diacylglycérol suggérant que ce canal est fonctionnel. Ces résultats indiquent que CNGA4 formerait un canal hétéromérique avec TRPC2 et aurait dans ce canal une fonction modulatrice. Des expériences complémentaires sont nécessaires afin de connaître le rôle de chacune de ces protéines dans la voie de signalisation des phéromones. Sensing pheromones: a role for the CNGA4 and TRPC2 proteins Mammalian pheromones are key chemical signals in the regulation of intraspecies social behaviors. Detection of these pheromones, which takes place in sensory neurons of the vomeronasal organ (VNO), implies the activation of the transient receptor potential canonical channel 2 (TRPC2) as the final effector. Interestingly, discrepancies between Trpc2 /- mice and mice lacking a VNO suggest the implication of another protein in the pheromone signaling pathway. This protein could either form a heteromeric channel with TRPC2 or a separate homomeric ion channel. The cyclic nucleotide-gated channel subunit CNGA4 is also expressed in the rodent VNO but its role and properties in this organ remain unknown. CNGA4 belongs to the CNG channel family which is playing an important role in different sensory pathways such as in light and odorant detection. We thus decided to study the role of the CNGA4 protein in the mouse VNO. We found CNGA4 to be expressed in axons, dendrites and in the sensory microvilli. Using mice bearing a non-functional form of CNGA4 we further demonstrated the importance of the CNGA4 protein for the pheromone signaling pathway as neurons from mutant mice were responding less frequently to chemosensory cues. As a result, mutant mice displayed a non-aggressive behavior and an impaired sexual discrimination ability. Based on the CNGA4 localization and its role in the pheromone signaling pathway we hypothesized a possible interaction between CNGA4 and TRPC2 forming a heteromeric channel. First evidences for this interaction came from the absence of CNGA4 expression in the sensory microvilli of Trpc2-/- mice. Second, using transfected HEK cells as an expression system we could observe that CNGA4 and TRPC2 interact and translocate to the plasma membrane. Perfusion of a DAG analogue on co-transfected HEK cells resulted in a strong calcium entry suggesting that the two proteins form a functional channel. These results might suggest a modulatory role for CNGA4 in a heteromeric TRPC2+CNGA4 ion channel. Further experiments will give more insights on the combined role of these transduction ion channels in pheromone detection.
Resumo:
Kalciumjonen påverkar många aspekter av cellbiologi, från fertiliseringen av äggcellen till tillväxt och differentiering av alla typer av celler. Störningar i hur kalciumjonerna transporteras in och friges i cellerna kan ha stor betydelse för hur sjukdomar framskrider. På grund av detta är det viktigt att studera hur kalciumtransportörer såsom kalciumkanaler fungerar och hur de påverkar cellernas funktioner. I avhandlingen har klassiska transient receptorpotential (TRPC) katjonkanaler studerats. Dessa kanaler är permeabla för kalcium och aktiveras nedströms av G-proteinkopplade receptorer. Resultaten som presenteras i avhandlingen visar på nya funktioner för TRPC2- och TRPC3-kanalerna. Utöver TRPC3-kanalens roll i plasmamembranen, där den medverkar i receptorreglerat kalciuminflöde, tyder våra resultat på att TRPC3 har en potentiell intracellulär roll. Vid överuttryck av kanalen lokaliserade kanalen till endoplasmatiska nätverket där kanalen friger intracellulärt kalcium. TRPC2 har en viktig funktion i möss där kanalen reglerar hur djuret reagerar på feromoner. Våra resultat tyder på att TRPC2 är involverad i autokrin sfingosin-1-fosfat (S1P)-signalering. S1P som produceras i cellerna transporterades ut från cellerna varpå det aktiverade S1P2-receptorer på plasmamembranen. Diacylglycerol som bildas som en följd av aktivering av S1P2-receptorn aktiverade i sin tur inflöde av extracellulärt kalcium. Våra resultat indikerar att TRPC2 är kanalen som förmedlar detta kalciuminflöde. I sköldkörtelceller studerades nedströms effekter för TRPC2. Kanalen reglerade negativt cAMP-produktionen i cellerna vilket hämmar extracellulärt signalreglerat kinas 1/2 (ERK1/2). När uttrycket för TRPC2 minskades i cellerna, ökades produktionen av cAMP och fosforyleringen av ERK1/2, vilket resulterade i ökat uttryck för receptorn för sköldkörtelstimulerande hormon. Slutligen, presenterar vi resultat som tyder på att TRPC2 är viktigt för sekretion av prekursorn till sköldkörtelhormon.
Resumo:
Kalciumjonen reglerar flera processer i celler såsom transkribering av gener, celldelning, cellernas rörlighet och celldöd. Därför har cellerna utvecklat många mekanismer för att reglera den intracellulära kalciumkoncentrationen. Kalciumkanaler spelar en viktig roll i denna regleringsprocess. TRPC-kanalerna (eng. canonical transient receptor potential) är en familj av jonkanaler med sju medlemmar (TRPC1-7) vars regleringsmekanismer och fysiologiska roller är varierande. TRPC2-kanalens fysiologiska signifikans, samt hur kanalen regleras, är dåligt karakteriserad. För första gången, rapporterar vi närvaron av TRPC2 kanalen i råttans sköldkörtelceller samt primära sköldkörtelceller från råtta. Hos gnagare har TRPC2 antagits vara exklusivt uttryckt i det vomeronasala organet. För att undersöka den fysiologiska betydelsen av kanalen, har vi utvecklat stabila celler med nedreglerat TRPC2 (shTRPC2) m.h.a. shRNA-teknik. Nedreglering av TRPC2 resulterade i stora skillnader i flera viktiga cellulära funktioner och i regleringen av sköldkörtelcellernas cellsignalering. Nedreglering av TRPC2 orsakade minskad agonist-beroende frigivning av kalcium från det endoplasmatiska nätverket, samt minskat agonist-beroende inflöde av extracellulärt kalcium, men ökade det basala kalciuminflödet. Uttrycket av PKCβ1 och PKCδ, SERCA-aktiviteten och kalciumhalten i det endoplasmatiska nätverket minskade i shTRPC2 celler. Kommunikation mellan kalcium- och cAMP-signalering påvisades vara TRPC2-beroende, vilket visades reglera uttrycket av TSH-receptorn. Vi undersökte också betydelsen av TRPC2 kanalen i reglering av sköldkörtelcellers proliferation, migration, vidhäftning och invasion; processer som alla var dämpade i shTRPC2 celler. Samamnfattningsvis påvisade dessa resultat en ny och viktig fysiologisk betydelse för TRPC2 kanalerna.
Resumo:
Capacitative Ca2+ entry (CCE) is Ca2+ entering after stimulation of inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3) formation and initiation of Ca2+ store depletion. One hallmark of CCE is that it can also be triggered merely by store depletion, as occurs after inhibition of internal Ca2+ pumps with thapsigargin. Evidence has accumulated in support of a role of transient receptor potential (Trp) proteins as structural subunits of a class of Ca2+-permeable cation channels activated by agonists that stimulate IP3 formation—very likely through a direct interaction between the IP3 receptor and a Trp subunit of the Ca2+ entry channel. The role of Trp’s in Ca2+ entry triggered by store depletion alone is less clear. Only a few of the cloned Trp’s appear to enhance this type of Ca2+ entry, and when they do, the effect requires special conditions to be observed, which native CCE does not. Here we report the full-length cDNA of mouse trp2, the homologue of the human trp2 pseudogene. Mouse Trp2 is shown to be readily activated not only after stimulation with an agonist but also by store depletion in the absence of an agonist. In contrast to other Trp proteins, Trp2-mediated Ca2+ entry activated by store depletion is seen under the same conditions that reveal endogenous store depletion-activated Ca2+ entry, i.e., classical CCE. The findings support the general hypothesis that Trp proteins are subunits of store- and receptor-operated Ca2+ channels.
Resumo:
Peter Karlson and Martin Lüscher used the term pheromone for the first time in 1959 to describe chemicals used for intra-species communication. Pheromones are volatile or non-volatile short-lived molecules secreted and/or contained in biological fluids, such as urine, a liquid known to be a main source of pheromones. Pheromonal communication is implicated in a variety of key animal modalities such as kin interactions, hierarchical organisations and sexual interactions and are consequently directly correlated with the survival of a given species. In mice, the ability to detect pheromones is principally mediated by the vomeronasal organ (VNO), a paired structure located at the base of the nasal cavity, and enclosed in a cartilaginous capsule. Each VNO has a tubular shape with a lumen allowing the contact with the external chemical world. The sensory neuroepithelium is principally composed of vomeronasal bipolar sensory neurons (VSNs). Each VSN extends a single dendrite to the lumen ending in a large dendritic knob bearing up to 100 microvilli implicated in chemical detection. Numerous subpopulations of VSNs are present. They are differentiated by the chemoreceptor they express and thus possibly by the ligand(s) they recognize. Two main vomeronasal receptor families, V1Rs and V2Rs, are composed respectively by 240 and 120 members and are expressed in separate layers of the neuroepithelium. Olfactory receptors (ORs) and formyl peptide receptors (FPRs) are also expressed in VSNs. Whether or not these neuronal subpopulations use the same downstream signalling pathway for sensing pheromones is unknown. Despite a major role played by a calcium-permeable channel (TRPC2) present in the microvilli of mature neurons TRPC2 independent transduction channels have been suggested. Due to the high number of neuronal subpopulations and the peculiar morphology of the organ, pharmacological and physiological investigations of the signalling elements present in the VNO are complex. Here, we present an acute tissue slice preparation of the mouse VNO for performing calcium imaging investigations. This physiological approach allows observations, in the natural environment of a living tissue, of general or individual subpopulations of VSNs previously loaded with Fura-2AM, a calcium dye. This method is also convenient for studying any GFP-tagged pheromone receptor and is adaptable for the use of other fluorescent calcium probes. As an example, we use here a VG mouse line, in which the translation of the pheromone V1rb2 receptor is linked to the expression of GFP by a polycistronic strategy.
Resumo:
Chromosome rearrangements involved in the formation of merodiploid strains in the Bacillus subtilis 168-166 system were explained by postulating the existence of intrachromosomal homology regions. This working hypothesis was tested by analysing sequences and restriction patterns of the, as yet uncharacterized, junctions between chromosome segments undergoing rearrangements in parent, 168 trpC2 and 166 trpE26, as well as in derived merodiploid strains. Identification, at the Ia/Ib chromosome junction of both parent strains, of a 1.3 kb segment nearly identical to a segment of prophage SPbeta established the existence of one of the postulated homology sequences. Inspection of relevant junctions revealed that a set of different homology regions, derived from prophage SPbeta, plays a key role in the formation of so-called trpE30, trpE30+, as well as of new class I merodiploids. Analysis of junctions involved in the transfer of the trpE26 mutation, i.e. simultaneous translocation of chromosome segment C and rotation of the terminal relative to the origin moiety of the chromosome, did not confirm the presence of any sequence suitable for homologous recombination. We propose a model involving simultaneous introduction of four donor DNA molecules, each comprising a different relevant junction, and their pairing with the junction regions of the recipient chromosome. The resolution of this structure, resting on homologous recombination, would confer the donor chromosome structure to the recipient, achieving some kind of 'transstamping'. In addition, a rather regular pattern of inverse and direct short sequence repeats in regions flanking the breaking points could be correlated with the initial, X-ray-induced, rearrangement.