Plants are attacked by a broad array of herbivores and pathogens. In response, plants deploy an arsenal of defensive traits. In Brassicaceae, the glucosinolate-myrosinase complex is a sophisticated two-component system to ward off opponents. However, this so-called ''mustard oil bomb'' is disarmed by a glucosinolate sulfatase of a crucifer specialist insect, diamondback moth, Plutella xylostella (Lepidoptera: Plutellidae). Sulfatase activity of this enzyme largely prevents the formation of toxic hydrolysis products arising from this plant defense system. Importantly, the enzyme acts on all major classes of glucosinolates, thus enabling diamondback moths to use a broad range of cruciferous host plants.
Biosynthetic nerve grafts are desired as alternative to autologous nerve grafts in peripheral nerve reconstruction. Artificial nerve conduits still have their limitations and are not widely accepted in the clinical setting. Here we report an analysis of fine-tuned chitosan tubes used to reconstruct 10 mm nerve defects in the adult rat. The chitosan tubes displayed low, medium and high degrees of acetylation (DAI: ≈ 2%, DA: ≈ 5%, DAIII: ≈ 20%) and therefore different degradability and microenvironments for the regenerating nerve tissue. Short and long term investigations were performed demonstrating that the chitosan tubes allowed functional and morphological nerve regeneration similar to autologous nerve grafts. Irrespective of the DA growth factor regulation demonstrated to be the same as in controls. Analyses of stereological parameters as well as the immunological tissue response at the implantation site and in the regenerated nerves, revealed that DAI and DAIII chitosan tubes displayed some limitations in the support of axonal regeneration and a high speed of degradation accompanied with low mechanical stability, respectively. The chitosan tubes combine several pre-requisites for a clinical acceptance and DAII chitosan tubes have to be judged as the most supportive for peripheral nerve regeneration.
FGF Receptor-1 (FGFR1), a membrane-targeted protein, is also involved in independent direct nuclear signaling. We show that nuclear accumulation of FGFR1 is a common response to retinoic acid (RA) in pluripotent embryonic stem cells (ESC) and neural progenitors and is both necessary and sufficient for neuronal-like differentiation and accompanying neuritic outgrowth. Dominant negative nuclear FGFR1, which lacks the tyrosine kinase domain, prevents RA-induced differentiation while full-length nuclear FGFR1 elicits differentiation in the absence of RA. Immunoprecipitation and GST assays demonstrate that FGFR1 interacts with RXR, RAR and their Nur77 and Nurr1 partners. Conditions that promote these interactions decrease the mobility of nuclear FGFR1 and RXR in live cells. RXR and FGFR1 co-associate with 5'-Fluorouridine-labeled transcription sites and with RA Responsive Elements (RARE). RA activation of neuronal (tyrosine hydroxylase) and neurogenic (fgf-2 and fgfr1) genes is accompanied by increased FGFR1, Nur, and histone H3.3 binding to their regulatory sequences. Reporter-gene assays show synergistic activations of RARE, NBRE, and NurRE by FGFR1, RAR/RXR, and Nurs. As shown for mESC differentiation, FGFR1 mediates gene activation by RA and augments transcription in the absence of RA. Cooperation of FGFR1 with RXR/RAR and Nurs at targeted genomic sequences offers a new mechanism in developmental gene regulation.
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