Kayhaagensen7880
Intracellular signaling with cyclic nucleotides are ubiquitous signaling pathways, yet the dynamics of these signals profoundly differ in different cell types. Biosensor imaging experiments, by providing direct measurements in intact cellular environment, reveal which receptors are activated by neuromodulators and how the coincidence of different neuromodulators is integrated at various levels in the signaling cascade. Phosphodiesterases appear as one important determinant of cross-talk between different signaling pathways. Finally, analysis of signal dynamics reveal that striatal medium-sized spiny neuron obey a different logic than other brain regions such as cortex, probably in relation with the function of this brain region which efficiently detects transient dopamine.
Axonal injury is a major component of traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI), associated with rapid deformation of spinal tissue and axonal projections. In vitro models enable us to examine these effects and screen potential therapies in a controlled, reproducible manner.
A customized, stretchable microchannel system was developed using polydimethylsiloxane microchannels. Cortical and spinal embryonic rat neurons were cultured within the microchannel structures, allowing a uniaxial strain to be applied to isolated axonal processes. Global strains of up to 52% were applied to the stretchable microchannel-on-a-chip platform leading to local strains of up to 12% being experienced by axons isolated in the microchannels.
Individual axons exposed to local strains between 3.2% and 8.7% developed beading within 30-minutes of injury. At higher local strains of 9.8% and 12% individual axons ruptured within 30-minutes of injury. Axon bundles, or fascicles, were more resistant to rupture at each strain level, compared to individual axons. At lower local strain of 3.2%, axon bundles inside microchannels and neuronal cells near entrances of them progressively swelled and degenerated over a period of 7 days after injury.
This method is simple, reliable and reproducible with good control and measurement of injury tolerance and morphological deformations using standard laboratory equipment. By measuring local strains, we observed that axonal injuries occur at a lower strain magnitude and a lower strain rate than previous methods reporting global strains, which may not accurately reflect the true axonal strain.
We describe a novel stretchable microchannel-on-a-chip platform to study the effect of varying local strain on morphological characteristics of neuronal injury.
We describe a novel stretchable microchannel-on-a-chip platform to study the effect of varying local strain on morphological characteristics of neuronal injury.
Studying human ageing is of increasing importance due to the worldwide ageing population. However, it faces the challenge of lengthy experiments to produce an ageing phenotype. Often, to recreate the hallmarks of ageing requires complex empirical conditions that can confound data interpretation. Indeed, many studies use whole organisms with relatively short life spans, which may have little, or limited, relevance to human ageing. There has been extensive use of cell lines to study ageing in human somatic cells, but the modelling of human neuronal ageing is somewhat more complex in vitro.
We cultured the well-characterised SH-SY5Y human neural cell line to produce high purity cultures of cells differentiated to express a neuronal phenotype, and designed a protocol to maintain these cells in culture until they accumulated biomarkers of cellular ageing.
Our data validate a novel and simple technique for the efficient differentiation and long-term maintenance of SH-SY5Y cells, expressing markers of neuronal differentiation and demonstrating electrical activity in culture. Over time in vitro, these cells progressively accumulate markers of ageing such as enhanced production of reactive oxygen species and accumulation of oxidative damage.
In comparison to existing techniques to model neuronal ageing our method is cost effective, requiring no specialist equipment or growth factors.
We demonstrate that SH-SY5Y cells, grown under these culture conditions, represent a simple model of neuronal ageing that is amenable to cell biological, biochemical and electrophysiological investigation.
We demonstrate that SH-SY5Y cells, grown under these culture conditions, represent a simple model of neuronal ageing that is amenable to cell biological, biochemical and electrophysiological investigation.As a conserved post-translational modification, O-mannosyltransferase families play important roles in many cellular processes. Three subfamilies (MaPmt1, MaPmt2 and MaPmt4) are grouped in Metarhizium acridum according to sequence homology. The functions of MaPmt1 and MaPmt4 have been characterized in M. acridum previously. In this study, the functions of another member belonging to the Pmt2 subfamily, MaPmt2, were identified through RNAi strategy. The three MaPmt2 knockdown mutants showed dramatically decreased expression of MaPmt2. Phenotypic analyses showed that the mutants exhibited decreased tolerances to wet-heat, UV-B irradiation and cell wall perturbing chemicals. Further studies revealed that the mutants presented thinner cell walls observed by transmission electron microscope combined with changed cell wall components. Besides, knockdown of MaPmt2 decelerated conidial germination and decreased conidial yield. Compared with the wild-type strain, the MaPmt2 knockdown mutants caused impaired virulence only by topical inoculation. Results illustrated that the decreased virulence by inoculation could result from the delayed conidial germination on locust wings, reduced appressorium formation, as well as reduced turgor pressure in MaPmt2 knockdown mutants.
Cone photoreceptor transplantation is a potential treatment for macular diseases. The optimal conditions for cone transplantation are poorly understood, partly because of the scarcity of cones in donor mice. To facilitate allogeneic cone photoreceptor transplantation studies in mice, we aimed to create and characterize a donor mouse model containing a cone-rich retina with a cone-specific enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) reporter.
We generated OPN1LW-EGFP/NRL
mice by crossing NRL
and OPN1LW-EGFP mice. click here We characterized the anatomical phenotype of OPN1LW-EGFP/NRL
mice using multimodal confocal scanning laser ophthalmoscopy (cSLO) imaging, immunohistology, and transmission electron microscopy. We evaluated retinal function using electroretinography (ERG), including 465 and 525nm chromatic stimuli. Retinal sheets and cell suspensions from OPN1LW-EGFP/NRL
mice were transplanted subretinally into immunodeficient Rd1 mice.
OPN1LW-EGFP/NRL
retinas were enriched with OPN1LW-EGFP
and S-opsin
ich reporter mouse strain may be useful to study the influence of graft structure on cone survival.Hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis (ATTR) is an autosomal dominant disease characterized by the extracellular deposition of the transport protein transthyretin (TTR) as amyloid fibrils. Despite the progress achieved in recent years, understanding why different TTR residue substitutions lead to different clinical manifestations remains elusive. Here, we studied the molecular basis of disease-causing missense mutations affecting residues R34 and K35. R34G and K35T variants cause vitreous amyloidosis, whereas R34T and K35N mutations result in amyloid polyneuropathy and restrictive cardiomyopathy. All variants are more sensitive to pH-induced dissociation and amyloid formation than the wild-type (WT)-TTR counterpart, specifically in the variants deposited in the eyes amyloid formation occurs close to physiological pHs. Chemical denaturation experiments indicate that all the mutants are less stable than WT-TTR, with the vitreous amyloidosis variants, R34G and K35T, being highly destabilized. Sequence-induced stabilization of the dimer-dimer interface with T119M rendered tetramers containing R34G or K35T mutations resistant to pH-induced aggregation. Because R34 and K35 are among the residues more distant to the TTR interface, their impact in this region is therefore theorized to occur at long range. The crystal structures of double mutants, R34G/T119M and K35T/T119M, together with molecular dynamics simulations indicate that their strong destabilizing effect is initiated locally at the BC loop, increasing its flexibility in a mutation-dependent manner. Overall, the present findings help us to understand the sequence-dynamic-structural mechanistic details of TTR amyloid aggregation triggered by R34 and K35 variants and to link the degree of mutation-induced conformational flexibility to protein aggregation propensity.Cytokinesis, the final step of mitosis, is mediated by an actomyosin contractile ring, the formation of which is temporally and spatially regulated following anaphase onset. Aurora-B is a member of the chromosomal passenger complex, which regulates various processes during mitosis; it is not understood, however, how Aurora-B is involved in cytokinesis. Here, we show that Aurora-B and myosin-IIB form a complex in vivo during telophase. Aurora-B phosphorylates the myosin-IIB rod domain at threonine 1847 (T1847), abrogating the ability of myosin-IIB monomers to form filaments. Furthermore, phosphorylation of myosin-IIB filaments by Aurora-B also promotes filament disassembly. We show that myosin-IIB possessing a phosphomimetic mutation at T1847 was unable to rescue cytokinesis failure caused by myosin-IIB depletion. Cells expressing a phosphoresistant mutation at T1847 had significantly longer intercellular bridges, implying that Aurora-B-mediated phosphorylation of myosin-IIB is important for abscission. We propose that myosin-IIB is a substrate of Aurora-B and reveal a new mechanism of myosin-IIB regulation by Aurora-B in the late stages of mitosis.Modular protein assembly has been widely reported as a mechanism for constructing allosteric machinery. Recently, a distinctive allosteric system has been identified in a bienzyme assembly comprising a 3-deoxy-d-arabino heptulosonate-7-phosphate synthase (DAH7PS) and chorismate mutase (CM). These enzymes catalyze the first and branch point reactions of aromatic amino acid biosynthesis in the bacterium Prevotella nigrescens (PniDAH7PS), respectively. The interactions between these two distinct catalytic domains support functional interreliance within this bifunctional enzyme. The binding of prephenate, the product of CM-catalyzed reaction, to the CM domain is associated with a striking rearrangement of overall protein conformation that alters the interdomain interactions and allosterically inhibits the DAH7PS activity. Here, we have further investigated the complex allosteric communication demonstrated by this bifunctional enzyme. We observed allosteric activation of CM activity in the presence of all DAH7PS substrates. Using small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) experiments, we show that changes in overall protein conformations and dynamics are associated with the presence of different DAH7PS substrates and the allosteric inhibitor prephenate. Furthermore, we have identified an extended interhelix loop located in CM domain, loopC320-F333, as a crucial segment for the interdomain structural and catalytic communications. Our results suggest that the dual-function enzyme PniDAH7PS contains a reciprocal allosteric system between the two enzymatic moieties as a result of this bidirectional interdomain communication. This arrangement allows for a complex feedback and feedforward system for control of pathway flux by connecting the initiation and branch point of aromatic amino acid biosynthesis.