Candida albicans is a common, harmless yeast in the human digestive tract that also causes severe systemic fungal infection in hospitalized patients. Its cell-wall surface displays a unique glycolipid called phospholipomannan (PLM). The ability of PLM to stimulate tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha production by J774 mouse cells correlates with the activation of nuclear factor (NF)-kappaB. We examined the involvement of Toll-like receptors (TLRs) in PLM-dependent stimulation. Compared with wild-type cells, which produced large amounts of TNF-alpha after incubation with PLM, the deletion of the TLR4 and TLR6 genes led to a limited alteration of the PLM-induced response. Deletion of the TLR2 gene completely abolished the cell response. Surface expression of PLM is a phylogenic trait of C. albicans, and the recognition of PLM by TLRs, together with the unique pathogenic potential of C. albicans, suggests that this molecule may be a member of the pathogen-associated molecular pattern family.
The importance of the nuclear receptor nurr1 for the appropriate development of mesencephalic dopaminesynthesizing neurons has been clearly demonstrated through the targeted disruption of the nurr1 gene. The persistence of nurr1 expression in adult tissue suggests a possible role for this transcription factor in the maintenance, as well as development, of the dopaminergic phenotype. To address this issue, we analyzed the effects of nurr1 on the transcriptional expression of the human dopamine transporter gene (hDAT), one of the most speci®c phenotypic markers for dopaminergic neurons. Nurr1 enhanced the transcriptional activity of hDAT gene constructs transiently transfected into a newly described cell line (SN4741) that expresses a dopaminergic phenotype, whereas other members of the NGFI-B subfamily of nuclear receptors had lesser or no effects. Nurr1 activation of hDAT was not dependent upon heterodimerization with the retinoid X receptor. Unexpectedly, functional analysis of a series of gene constructs revealed that a region of the hDAT 5 H -¯anking sequence devoid of NGFI-B response element (NBRE)-like sites mediated nurr1 activation. Additional experiments using a nurr1 mutant construct suggest that nurr1 activates hDAT transcription via a novel NBRE-independent mechanism.
Liver X receptors (Lxrα and Lxrβ) are ligand-dependent nuclear receptors critical for ventral midbrain neurogenesis in vivo. However, no endogenous midbrain Lxr ligand has so far been identified. Here we used LC/MS and functional assays to identify cholic acid as a new Lxr ligand. Moreover, 24(S),25-epoxycholesterol (24,25-EC) was found to be the most potent and abundant Lxr ligand in the developing mouse midbrain. Both Lxr ligands promoted neural development in an Lxr-dependent manner in zebrafish in vivo. Notably, each ligand selectively regulated the development of distinct midbrain neuronal populations. Whereas cholic acid increased survival and neurogenesis of Brn3a-positive red nucleus neurons, 24,25-EC promoted dopaminergic neurogenesis. These results identify an entirely new class of highly selective and cell type-specific regulators of neurogenesis and neuronal survival. Moreover, 24,25-EC promoted dopaminergic differentiation of embryonic stem cells, suggesting that Lxr ligands may thus contribute to the development of cell replacement and regenerative therapies for Parkinson's disease.
Transplantation of islets of Langerhans is a potential cure for type 1 diabetes, but its success is hampered by destruction of the islets. The data presented herein suggest that the active metabolite of vitamin D3 [1,25-(OH)2D3] may promote islet cell survival by modulating the effects of inflammatory cytokines, which contribute to beta-cell demise. We investigated some of the mechanisms triggering the apoptotic machinery in rat insulinoma RINm5F cells and human islets treated with IL-1beta plus interferon-gamma plus TNFalpha and assessed the effects of 1,25-(OH)2D3 in these processes. Mitochondrial transmembrane permeability and apoptotic features, determined by percentage of sub-G1 cells, quantitation of DNA strand breaks, and Hoechst staining, were significantly increased by cytokines and reverted toward control values by 1,25-(OH)2D3 cotreatment. The cytoprotection of cells correlated with the abrogation of cytokine-induced nitric oxide production. The activation of nuclear factor-kappaB plays a key role in the different pathways implicated in nitric oxide generation. We demonstrated for the first time, in both RINm5F cells and human islets, that 1,25-(OH)2D3 was able to induce and maintain high levels of A20, an antiapoptotic protein known to block nuclear factor-kappaB activation. Our study showed a clear efficiency of 1,25-(OH)2D3 on the apoptotic machinery triggered by cytokines in beta-cells and suggests that 1,25-(OH)2D3 could help overcome a major obstacle encountered in the cellular therapy of diabetes, such as nonfunction in the immediate posttransplantation period.
Bone morphogenetic proteins such as BMP4 are essential for proper development of telencephalic forebrain structures and induce differentiation of telencephalic neural stem cells into a variety of cellular fates, including astrocytic, neuronal, and mesenchymal cells. Little is yet understood regarding the mechanisms that underlie the spatiotemporal differences in progenitor response to BMP4. In a screen designed to identify novel targets of BMP4 signaling in telencephalic neural stem cells, we found the mRNA levels of the previously uncharacterized factor CXXC5 reproducibly up-regulated upon BMP4 stimulation. In vivo, CXXC5 expression overlapped with BMP4 adjacent to Wnt3a expression in the dorsal regions of the telencephalon, including the developing choroid plexus. CXXC5 showed partial homology with Idax, a related protein previously shown to interact with the Wnt-signaling intermediate Dishevelled (Dvl). Indeed CXXC5 and Dvl co-localized in the cytoplasm and interacted in co-immunoprecipitation experiments. Moreover, fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) experiments verified that CXXC5 and Dvl2 were located in close spatial proximity in neural stem cells. Studies of the functional role of CXXC5 revealed that overexpression of CXXC5 or exposure to BMP4 repressed the levels of the canonical Wnt signaling target Axin2, and CXXC5 attenuated Wnt3a-mediated increase in TOPflash reporter activity. Accordingly, RNA interference of CXXC5 attenuated the BMP4-mediated decrease in Axin2 levels and facilitated the response to Wnt3a in neural stem cells. We propose that CXXC5 is acting as a BMP4 -induced inhibitor of Wnt signaling in neural stem cells. Members of the TGFß family such as bone morphogenetic proteins (BMP)5 influence multiple essential events during brain development, such as differentiation, proliferation, and migration (1-3). Stimulation of telencephalic neural stem cells by BMP4 induces differentiation into a variety of cellular fates, including neuronal, astrocytic and smooth muscle cells in vitro, and genetic studies have shown that BMP4 is essential for proper differentiation and regionalization of the telencephalic forebrain (1, 2, 4, 5). BMP4 mediates its effects through nuclear translocalization of Smad proteins such as Smad1 and Smad4 that can act directly as transcription factors and associate with a number of important cofactors, including TGIF, Sip1, and CBP/p300 (6, 7).BMP activity exert cross-talk with many signaling pathways, such as the membrane-bound receptor Notch, fibroblast growth factors (FGFs), and Wnt factors (8, 9), and it has been proposed that BMP molecules act in synergy with canonical Wnt signaling molecules, such as Wnt3a, to regulate telencephalic regionalization (1, 10). Less is known regarding downstream targets of BMP signaling that regulate the spatial and temporal context-specific differences in progenitor responsiveness to extracellular signaling factors.BMP activity is directly regulated by extracellular inhibitors such as noggin and chordin, and Wnt signaling acti...
Control over progenitor proliferation and neurogenesis remains a key challenge for stem cell neurobiology and a prerequisite for successful stem cell replacement therapies for neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson's disease (PD). Here, we examined the function of two nuclear receptors, liver X receptors (Lxralpha and beta) and their ligands, oxysterols, as regulators of cell division, ventral midbrain (VM) neurogenesis, and dopaminergic (DA) neuron development. Deletion of Lxrs reduced cell cycle progression and VM neurogenesis, resulting in decreased DA neurons at birth. Activation of Lxrs with oxysterol ligands increased the number of DA neurons in mouse embryonic stem cells (ESCs) and in wild-type but not Lxralphabeta(-/-) VM progenitor cultures. Likewise, oxysterol treatment of human ESCs (hESCs) during DA differentiation increased neurogenesis and the number of mature DA neurons, while reducing proliferating progenitors. Thus, Lxr ligands may improve current hESC replacement strategies for PD by selectively augmenting the generation of DA neurons.
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