Differential Control (differential + control)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Differential control of apoptosis by DJ-1 in prostate benign and cancer cells

JOURNAL OF CELLULAR BIOCHEMISTRY, Issue 6 2004
Yaacov Hod
Abstract DJ-1 is a conserved protein reported to be involved in diverse cellular processes ranging from cellular transformation, control of protein,RNA interaction, oxidative stress response to control of male infertility, among several others. Mutations in the human gene have been shown to be associated with an autosomal recessive, early onset Parkinson's disease (PARK7). The present study examines the control of DJ-1 expression in prostatic benign hyperplasia (BPH-1) and cancer (PC-3) cell lines in which DJ-1 abundance differs significantly. We show that while BPH-1 cells exhibit low basal level of DJ-1 expression, stress-inducing agents such as H2O2 and mitomycin C markedly increase the intracellular level of the polypeptide. In contrast, DJ-1 expression is relatively high in PC-3 cells, and incubation with the same cytotoxic drugs does not modulate further the level of the polypeptide. In correlation with the expression of DJ-1, both cytotoxic agents activate the apoptotic pathway in the prostatic benign cells but not in PC-3 cells, which are resistant to their action. We further demonstrate that incubation of BPH-1 cells with TNF-related-apoptosis-inducing-ligand/Apo-2L (TRAIL) also enhances DJ-1 expression and that TRAIL and H2O2 act additively to stimulate DJ-1 accumulation but synergistically in the activation of the apoptotic pathway. Time-course analysis of DJ-1 stimulation shows that while DJ-1 level increases without significant lag in TRAIL-treated cells, there is a delay in H2O2 -treated cells, and that the increase in DJ-1 abundance precedes the activation of apoptosis. Unexpectedly, over-expression of DJ-1 de-sensitizes BPH-1 cells to the action of apoptotic-inducing agents. However, RNA-interference-mediated silencing of DJ-1 expression results in sensitization of PC-3 cells to TRAIL action. These results are consistent with a model in which DJ-1 is involved in the control of cell death in prostate cell lines. DJ-1 appears to play a differential role between cells expressing a low but inducible level of DJ-1 (e.g., BPH-1 cells) and those expressing a high but constitutive level of the polypeptide (e.g., PC-3 cells). © 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Linking environmental warming to the fitness of the invasive clam Corbicula fluminea

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, Issue 12 2009
MARKUS WEITERE
Abstract Climate warming is discussed as a factor that can favour the success of invasive species. In the present study, we analysed potential fitness gains of moderate warming (3 °C above field temperature) on the invasive clam Corbicula fluminea during summer and winter. The experiments were conducted under seminatural conditions in a bypass-system of a large river (Rhine, Germany). We showed that warming in late summer results in a significant decrease in the clams' growth rates (body mass and shell length increase) and an increase in mortality rate. The addition of planktonic food dampens the negative effect of warming on the growth rates. This suggests that the reason for the negative growth effect of temperature increase in late summer is a negative energetic balance caused by an enhanced metabolic rate at limited food levels. Warming during early summer revealed contrasting effects with respect of body mass (no warming effect) and shell length (increased shell growth with warming). This differential control of both parameters further enhances the loss of the relative (size-specific) body mass with warming. In contrast, warming in winter had a consistently positive effect on the clams' growth rate as demonstrated in two independent experiments. Furthermore, the reproduction success (as measured by the average number of larvae per clam) during the main breeding period (April) was strongly enhanced by experimental warming during winter, i.e. by eight times during the relatively cold winter 2005/2006 and by 2.6 times during the relatively warm winter 2007/2008. This strong, positive effect of moderate winter warming on the clams' fitness is probably one reason for the recent invasion success of C. fluminea in the northern hemisphere. However, warm summer events might counteract the positive winter warming effect, which could balance out the fitness gains. [source]


Strategies and challenges in eliciting immunity to melanoma

IMMUNOLOGICAL REVIEWS, Issue 1 2008
Andrew R. Ferguson
Summary: The ability of CD8+ T cells to recognize melanoma tumors has led to the development of immunotherapeutic approaches that use the antigens CD8+ T cells recognize. However, clinical response rates have been disappointing. Here we summarize our work to understand the mechanisms of self-tolerance that limit responses to currently utilized antigens and our approach to identify new antigens directly tied to malignancy. We also explore several aspects of the anti-tumor immune response induced by peptide-pulsed dendritic cells (DCs). DCs differentially augment the avidity of recall T cells specific for self-antigens and overcome a process of aberrant CD8+ T-cell differentiation that occurs in tumor-draining lymph nodes. DC migration is constrained by injection route, resulting in immune responses in localized lymphoid tissue, and differential control of tumors depending on their location in the body. We demonstrate that CD8+ T-cell differentiation in different lymphoid compartments alters the expression of homing receptor molecules and leads to the presence of systemic central memory cells. Our studies highlight several issues that must be addressed to improve the efficacy of tumor immunotherapy. [source]


Intermittent Footshock Facilitates Dendritic Vasopressin Release but Suppresses Vasopressin Synthesis within the Rat Supraoptic Nucleus

JOURNAL OF NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY, Issue 7 2003
T. Onaka
Abstract Emotional stress inhibits vasopressin release from the pituitary but may facilitate its release from the dendrites in the hypothalamus. We examined effects of intermittently applied footshock upon the amount of vasopressin heteronuclear RNA in the hypothalamus. The footshock decreased plasma vasopressin concentration but increased its extracellular concentration within the supraoptic nucleus. The contents of the vasopressin heteronuclear RNA in the supraoptic nucleus were significantly decreased after the shock. These data suggest that intermittent footshock decreases not only vasopressin release from the axon terminals in the pituitary, but also vasopressin synthesis in the cell bodies in the hypothalamus while the stimulus facilitates vasopressin release from the dendrites in the hypothalamus. The data also suggest differential control of dendritic vasopressin release and synthesis in the hypothalamus. [source]


Duplicated P5CS genes of Arabidopsis play distinct roles in stress regulation and developmental control of proline biosynthesis

THE PLANT JOURNAL, Issue 1 2008
Gyöngyi Székely
Summary ,-1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate synthetase enzymes, which catalyse the rate-limiting step of proline biosynthesis, are encoded by two closely related P5CS genes in Arabidopsis. Transcription of the P5CS genes is differentially regulated by drought, salinity and abscisic acid, suggesting that these genes play specific roles in the control of proline biosynthesis. Here we describe the genetic characterization of p5cs insertion mutants, which indicates that P5CS1 is required for proline accumulation under osmotic stress. Knockout mutations of P5CS1 result in the reduction of stress-induced proline synthesis, hypersensitivity to salt stress, and accumulation of reactive oxygen species. By contrast, p5cs2 mutations cause embryo abortion during late stages of seed development. The desiccation sensitivity of p5cs2 embryos does not reflect differential control of transcription, as both P5CS mRNAs are detectable throughout embryonic development. Cellular localization studies with P5CS,GFP gene fusions indicate that P5CS1 is sequestered into subcellular bodies in embryonic cells, where P5CS2 is dominantly cytoplasmic. Although proline feeding rescues the viability of mutant embryos, p5cs2 seedlings undergo aberrant development and fail to produce fertile plants even when grown on proline. In seedlings, specific expression of P5CS2,GFP is seen in leaf primordia where P5CS1,GFP levels are very low, and P5CS2,GFP also shows a distinct cell-type-specific and subcellular localization pattern compared to P5CS1,GFP in root tips, leaves and flower organs. These data demonstrate that the Arabidopsis P5CS enzymes perform non-redundant functions, and that P5CS1 is insufficient for compensation of developmental defects caused by inactivation of P5CS2. [source]


RENAL OXYGEN DELIVERY: MATCHING DELIVERY TO METABOLIC DEMAND

CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL PHARMACOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY, Issue 10 2006
Paul M O'Connor
SUMMARY 1The kidneys are second only to the heart in terms of O2 consumption; however, relative to other organs, the kidneys receive a very high blood flow and oxygen extraction in the healthy kidney is low. Despite low arterial,venous O2 extraction, the kidneys are particularly susceptible to hypoxic injury and much interest surrounds the role of renal hypoxia in the development and progression of both acute and chronic renal disease. 2Numerous regulatory mechanisms have been identified that act to maintain renal parenchymal oxygenation within homeostatic limits in the in vivo kidney. However, the processes by which many of these mechanisms act to modulate renal oxygenation and the factors that influence these processes remain poorly understood. 3A number of such mechanisms specific to the kidney are reviewed herein, including the relationship between renal blood flow and O2 consumption, pre- and post-glomerular arterial,venous O2 shunting, tubulovascular cross-talk, the differential control of regional kidney blood flow and the tubuloglomerular feedback mechanism. 4The roles of these mechanisms in the control of renal oxygenation, as well as how dysfunction of these mechanisms may lead to renal hypoxia, are discussed. [source]