The Journal of biological chemistry
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Increased endothelial cell (EC) permeability is central to the pathophysiology of inflammatory syndromes such as sepsis and acute lung injury (ALI). Activated protein C (APC), a serine protease critically involved in the regulation of coagulation and inflammatory processes, improves sepsis survival through an unknown mechanism. We hypothesized a direct effect of APC to both prevent increased EC permeability and to restore vascular integrity after edemagenic agonists. ⋯ Co-immunoprecipitation studies demonstrate an interaction between EPCR and S1P1 upon APC treatment. Targeted silencing of S1P1 expression using siRNA significantly reduced APC-mediated barrier protection against thrombin. These data suggest that novel EPCR ligation and S1P1 transactivation results in EC cytoskeletal rearrangement and barrier protection, components potentially critical to the improved survival of APC-treated patients with severe sepsis.
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Transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta, bone morphogenetic protein (BMP), and interleukin-1beta activate TGF-beta-activated kinase 1 (TAK1), which lies upstream of the p38 MAPK, JNK, and NF-kappaB pathways. Our knowledge remains incomplete of TAK1 target genes, requirement for cooperative signaling, and capacity for shared or segregated ligand-dependent responses. We show that adenoviral overexpression of TAK1a in articular chondrocytes stimulated type II collagen protein synthesis 3-6-fold and mimicked the response to TGF-beta1 and BMP2. ⋯ TAK1a, overexpressed alone and immunoprecipitated, phosphorylated MKK6 and stimulated the plasminogen-activated inhibitor-1 promoter following transient transfection; both effects were enhanced by TAB1 coexpression, but type II collagen synthesis was not. Stimulation by TAK1a or TGF-beta did not require increased Col2a1 mRNA, and TAK1 actually reduced Col2a1 mRNA in parallel with the cartilage markers, SRY-type HMG box 9 (Sox9) and aggrecan. Thus, TAK1 increased target gene expression (Col2a1) by translational or posttranslational mechanisms as a Smad3-independent response shared by TGF-beta1 and BMP2.
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To obtain further information on time course and mechanisms of cell death after poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (PARP-1) hyperactivation, we used HeLa cells exposed for 1 h to the DNA alkylating agent N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine. This treatment activated PARP-1 and caused a rapid drop of cellular NAD(H) and ATP contents, culminating 8-12 h later in cell death. PARP-1 antagonists fully prevented nucleotide depletion and death. ⋯ PARP-1 inhibitors rescued ATP (but not NAD(H) levels) in cells undergoing hyper-poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation. Glycolysis played a central role in the energy recovery, whereas mitochondria consumed ATP in the early recovery phase and produced ATP in the late phase after PARP-1 inhibition, further indicating that nuclear poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation rapidly modulates mitochondrial functioning. Together, our data provide evidence for rapid nucleus-mitochondria cross-talk during hyper-poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation-dependent cell death.
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Malignant hyperthermia (MH) and central core disease (CCD) are caused by mutations in the RYR1 gene encoding the skeletal muscle isoform of the ryanodine receptor (RyR1), a homotetrameric Ca(2+) release channel. Rabbit RyR1 mutant cDNAs carrying mutations corresponding to those in human RyR1 that cause MH and CCD were expressed in HEK-293 cells, which do not have endogenous RyR, and in primary cultures of rat skeletal muscle, which express rat RyR1. Analysis of intracellular Ca(2+) pools was performed using aequorin probes targeted to the lumen of the endo/sarcoplasmic reticulum (ER/SR), to the mitochondrial matrix, or to the cytosol. ⋯ Measurements of luminal ER/SR Ca(2+) revealed that the mutations generated leaky channels in all cases, but the leak was particularly pronounced in CCD mutants. Cytosolic and mitochondrial Ca(2+) transients induced by caffeine stimulation were drastically augmented in the MH mutant, slightly reduced in one CCD mutant (Y523S) and completely abolished in another (I4898T). The results suggest that local Ca(2+) derangements of different degrees account for the specific cellular phenotypes of the two disorders.
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Foxa1 and Foxa2 are closely related family members of the Foxa group of transcription factors that are coexpressed in subsets of respiratory epithelial cells throughout lung morphogenesis. Shared patterns of expression, conservation of DNA binding, and transcriptional activation domains indicate that they may serve complementary functions in the regulation of gene expression during lung morphogenesis. Whereas branching morphogenesis of the fetal lung occurs normally in the Foxa2Delta/Delta and Foxa1-/- mice, deletion of both Foxa1 and Foxa2 (in Foxa2Delta/Delta, Foxa1-/- mice) inhibited cell proliferation, epithelial cell differentiation, and branching. ⋯ Foxa1 and Foxa2 regulated Shh (sonic hedgehog) and Shh-dependent genes in the respiratory epithelial cells that influenced the expression of genes in the pulmonary mesenchyme that are required for branching morphogenesis. Epithelial cell differentiation, as indicated by lack of expression of surfactant protein B, surfactant protein C, the Clara cell secretory protein, and Foxj1, was inhibited. Foxa family members regulate signaling and transcriptional programs required for morphogenesis and cell differentiation during formation of the lung.