Literatura científica selecionada sobre o tema "Transcript factor EB"

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Artigos de revistas sobre o assunto "Transcript factor EB"

1

Sproule, Thomas J., Robert Y. Wilpan, John J. Wilson, Benjamin E. Low, Yudai Kabata, Tatsuo Ushiki, Riichiro Abe, Michael V. Wiles, Derry C. Roopenian e John P. Sundberg. "Dystonin modifiers of junctional epidermolysis bullosa and models of epidermolysis bullosa simplex without dystonia musculorum". PLOS ONE 18, n.º 10 (26 de outubro de 2023): e0293218. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0293218.

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The Lamc2jeb junctional epidermolysis bullosa (EB) mouse model has been used to demonstrate that significant genetic modification of EB symptoms is possible, identifying as modifiers Col17a1 and six other quantitative trait loci, several with strong candidate genes including dystonin (Dst/Bpag1). Here, CRISPR/Cas9 was used to alter exon 23 in mouse skin specific isoform Dst-e (Ensembl GRCm38 transcript name Dst-213, transcript ID ENSMUST00000183302.5, protein size 2639AA) and validate a proposed arginine/glutamine difference at amino acid p1226 in B6 versus 129 mice as a modifier of EB. Frame shift deletions (FSD) in mouse Dst-e exon 23 (Dst-eFSD/FSD) were also identified that cause mice carrying wild-type Lamc2 to develop a phenotype similar to human EB simplex without dystonia musculorum. When combined, Dst-eFSD/FSD modifies Lamc2jeb/jeb (FSD+jeb) induced disease in unexpected ways implicating an altered balance between DST-e (BPAG1e) and a rarely reported rodless DST-eS (BPAG1eS) in epithelium as a possible mechanism. Further, FSD+jeb mice with pinnae removed are found to provide a test bed for studying internal epithelium EB disease and treatment without severe skin disease as a limiting factor while also revealing and accelerating significant nasopharynx symptoms present but not previously noted in Lamc2jeb/jeb mice.
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2

Corà, Davide, Federico Bussolino e Gabriella Doronzo. "TFEB Signalling-Related MicroRNAs and Autophagy". Biomolecules 11, n.º 7 (4 de julho de 2021): 985. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biom11070985.

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The oncogenic Transcription Factor EB (TFEB), a member of MITF-TFE family, is known to be the most important regulator of the transcription of genes responsible for the control of lysosomal biogenesis and functions, autophagy, and vesicles flux. TFEB activation occurs in response to stress factors such as nutrient and growth factor deficiency, hypoxia, lysosomal stress, and mitochondrial damage. To reach the final functional status, TFEB is regulated in multimodal ways, including transcriptional rate, post-transcriptional regulation, and post-translational modifications. Post-transcriptional regulation is in part mediated by miRNAs. miRNAs have been linked to many cellular processes involved both in physiology and pathology, such as cell migration, proliferation, differentiation, and apoptosis. miRNAs also play a significant role in autophagy, which exerts a crucial role in cell behaviour during stress or survival responses. In particular, several miRNAs directly recognise TFEB transcript or indirectly regulate its function by targeting accessory molecules or enzymes involved in its post-translational modifications. Moreover, the transcriptional programs triggered by TFEB may be influenced by the miRNA-mediated regulation of TFEB targets. Finally, recent important studies indicate that the transcription of many miRNAs is regulated by TFEB itself. In this review, we describe the interplay between miRNAs with TFEB and focus on how these types of crosstalk affect TFEB activation and cellular functions.
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3

Yu, Miaoying, Yinghui Wei, Kui Xu, Shasha Liu, Lei Ma, Yangli Pei, Yanqing Hu et al. "EGFR deficiency leads to impaired self-renewal and pluripotency of mouse embryonic stem cells". PeerJ 7 (29 de janeiro de 2019): e6314. http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.6314.

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Background Self-renewal and pluripotency are considered as unwavering features of embryonic stem cells (ESCs). How ESCs regulate the self-renewal and differentiation is a central question in development and regenerative medicine research. Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) was identified as a critical regulator in embryonic development, but its role in the maintenance of ESCs is poorly understood. Methods Here, EGFR was disrupted by its specific inhibitor AG1478 in mouse ESCs (mESCs), and its self-renewal and pluripotency were characterized according to their proliferation, expression of pluripotency markers, embryoid body (EB) formation, and mRNA expression patterns. We also used another EGFR inhibitor (gefitinib) and RNA interference assay to rule out the possibility of non-specific effects of AG1478. Results EGFR inhibition by AG1478 treatment in mESCs markedly reduced cell proliferation, caused cell cycle arrest at G0/G1 phase, and altered protein expressions of the cell cycle regulatory genes (CDK2 (decreased 11.3%) and proliferating cell nuclear antigen (decreased 25.2%)). The immunoreactivities and protein expression of pluripotency factors (OCT4 (decreased 26.9%)) also dramatically decreased, while the differentiation related genes (GATA4 (increased 1.6-fold)) were up-regulated in mESCs after EGFR inhibition. Meanwhile, EGFR inhibition in mESCs disrupted EB formation, indicating its impaired pluripotency. Additionally, the effects observed by EGFR inhibition with another inhibitor gefitinib and siRNA were consistent with those observed by AG1478 treatment in mESCs. These effects were manifested in the decreased expression of proliferative and pluripotency-related genes and the increased expression of genes involved in differentiation. Moreover, RNA-seq analysis displayed that transcript profiling was changed significantly after EGFR inhibition by AG1478. A large number of differentially expressed genes were involved in cell cycle, apoptotic process, epigenetic modification, and metabolic process, which were related to self-renewal and pluripotency, confirming that EGFR deficiency impaired self-renewal and pluripotency in mESCs. Conclusions Taken together, our results demonstrated the importance of EGFR in guarding the stemness of mESCs.
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Arkins, S., N. Rebeiz, A. Biragyn, D. L. Reese e K. W. Kelley. "Murine macrophages express abundant insulin-like growth factor-I class I Ea and Eb transcripts." Endocrinology 133, n.º 5 (novembro de 1993): 2334–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/endo.133.5.8404686.

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5

Woodall, SM, NS Bassett, PD Gluckman e BH Breier. "Consequences of maternal undernutrition for fetal and postnatal hepatic insulin-like growth factor-I, growth hormone receptor and growth hormone binding protein gene regulation in the rat". Journal of Molecular Endocrinology 20, n.º 3 (1 de junho de 1998): 313–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1677/jme.0.0200313.

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The mechanisms that contribute to postnatal growth failure following intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR) are poorly understood. We demonstrated previously that nutritional deprivation in the pregnant rat leads to IUGR in offspring, postnatal growth failure and to changes in endocrine parameters of the somatotrophic axis. The present study examines the effects of maternal undernutrition (30% of the ad libitum available diet; IUGR group) throughout pregnancy on hepatic insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I), growth hormone receptor (GHR) and GH-binding protein (GHBP) gene expression using solution hybridisation/RNase protection assays (RPAs). Animals were killed at fetal (E22, term=23 days) and postnatal (birth, days 5, 9, 15, 21) ages, livers were collected and RNA extracted for RPAs. Results demonstrate the presence of all IGF-I mRNAs resulting from transcription start sites (ss) in exon 1 (ss1/2, ss3, ss2 spliced), exon 2, the two IGF-I E-domain variants (Ea and Eb) as well as GHR and GHBP mRNAs in hepatic tissue at E22 in both the ad libitum fed and IUGR offspring. In the postnatal liver, IGF-I ss1/2, ss3, ss2 spliced, Ea and Eb IGF-I variants as well as GHR and GHBP mRNA transcripts increased in abundance from birth to day 21. IGF-I exon 2 transcripts were relatively constant from E22 until postnatal day 15, then increased at postnatal day 21 in both the ad libitum fed and IUGR offspring. The expressions of all hepatic IGF-I leader exon ss and Ea domain variants were significantly reduced in IUGR offspring (P<0.05) from E22 to postnatal day 9. In contrast, relative abundance of hepatic IGF-I Eb variants, GHR and GHBP mRNAs were unaltered in IUGR offspring compared with the ad libitum fed animals. Whether these postnatal effects of undernutrition are a direct consequence of IUGR or whether they are related, in part, to differences in postnatal food intake remains to be investigated. In summary, we have demonstrated that hepatic IGF-I ss within exon 1 and exon 2 are coordinately regulated. Use of exon 1 ss increased during normal development and decreased with IUGR without changes in GHR or GHBP gene expression. Eb transcripts, thought to represent GH-dependent endocrine regulation of IGF-I, were unchanged in IUGR. These results suggest a possible postreceptor defect in GH action as a consequence of IUGR.
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Gajardo, Gonzalo, Luis Paiva, Cesar Ulloa-Leal, Ximena Valderrama, Gerardo López, Albert Carrasco, Alejandra Isabel Hidalgo, Mauricio E. Silva, Patricio I. Palma e Marcelo H. Ratto. "Administration of Beta-Nerve Growth Factor during the Preovulatory Stage Improves Endocrine and Luteal Function in Dairy Heifers". Animals 13, n.º 6 (9 de março de 2023): 1004. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani13061004.

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The neurotrophin beta-nerve growth factor (NGF), which is present in the semen of different mammals, elicits potent ovulatory and luteotrophic actions in llamas following systemic administration. Here, we determine if purified NGF given intramuscularly (IM) during the preovulatory stage affects the corpus luteum (CL), hormone production, endometrial gene expression, and pregnancy rate of dairy heifers. Holstein-Friesian heifers were estrus-synchronized using estradiol benzoate (EB) plus an intravaginal progesterone (P4) device (DIB). After eight days, the device was removed and cloprostenol was given IM; the next day (day 9), heifers received EB IM plus one of the following: (i) 1 mg of NGF (NGF D9 group), (ii) 1 mg of NGF 32 h after EB (NGF D10 group), or (iii) phosphate buffer saline (control group). To measure pregnancy rates, heifers were treated similarly, then artificially inseminated with sexed semen 48–52 h after DIB removal, then an ultrasound was conducted 30 days after insemination. The females given NGF along with EB (NGF D9) showed significantly higher luteinizing hormone (LH) concentrations, larger CL vascular areas, and higher plasma P4 concentrations than the NGF D10 and control animals. Downregulation of the P4 receptor (PGR), and upregulation of both lipoprotein lipase (LPL) and Solute Carrier Family 6 member 14 (SLC6A14) endometrial genes, were detected in NGF D9 heifers. Furthermore, these heifers had a 10% higher pregnancy rate than the control group. We conclude that the higher P4 output, in response to the early NGF administration, led to the enhanced gene expression of transcripts related to uterine receptivity that may result in enhanced pregnancy rates.
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7

SKOUDY, Anouchka, Meritxell ROVIRA, Pierre SAVATIER, Franz MARTIN, Trinidad LEÓN-QUINTO, Bernat SORIA e Francisco X. REAL. "Transforming growth factor (TGF)beta, fibroblast growth factor (FGF) and retinoid signalling pathways promote pancreatic exocrine gene expression in mouse embryonic stem cells". Biochemical Journal 379, n.º 3 (1 de maio de 2004): 749–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1042/bj20031784.

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Extracellular signalling cues play a major role in the activation of differentiation programmes. Mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells are pluripotent and can differentiate into a wide variety of specialized cells. Recently, protocols designed to induce endocrine pancreatic differentiation in vitro have been designed but little information is currently available concerning the potential of ES cells to differentiate into acinar pancreatic cells. By using conditioned media of cultured foetal pancreatic rudiments, we demonstrate that ES cells can respond in vitro to signalling pathways involved in exocrine development and differentiation. In particular, modulation of the hedgehog, transforming growth factor β, retinoid, and fibroblast growth factor pathways in ES cell-derived embryoid bodies (EB) resulted in increased levels of transcripts encoding pancreatic transcription factors and cytodifferentiation markers, as demonstrated by RT-PCR. In EB undergoing spontaneous differentiation, expression of the majority of the acinar genes (i.e. amylase, carboxypeptidase A and elastase) was induced after the expression of endocrine genes, as occurs in vivo during development. These data indicate that ES cells can undergo exocrine pancreatic differentiation with a kinetic pattern of expression reminiscent of pancreas development in vivo and that ES cells can be coaxed to express an acinar phenotype by activation of signalling pathways known to play a role in pancreatic development and differentiation.
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Schindler, Maria, Sünje Fischer, René Thieme, Bernd Fischer e Anne Navarrete Santos. "cAMP-Responsive Element Binding Protein: A Vital Link in Embryonic Hormonal Adaptation". Endocrinology 154, n.º 6 (8 de abril de 2013): 2208–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/en.2012-2096.

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Abstract The transcription factor cAMP responsive element-binding protein (CREB) and activating transcription factors (ATFs) are downstream components of the insulin/IGF cascade, playing crucial roles in maintaining cell viability and embryo survival. One of the CREB target genes is adiponectin, which acts synergistically with insulin. We have studied the CREB-ATF-adiponectin network in rabbit preimplantation development in vivo and in vitro. From the blastocyst stage onwards, CREB and ATF1, ATF3, and ATF4 are present with increasing expression for CREB, ATF1, and ATF3 during gastrulation and with a dominant expression in the embryoblast (EB). In vitro stimulation with insulin and IGF-I reduced CREB and ATF1 transcripts by approximately 50%, whereas CREB phosphorylation was increased. Activation of CREB was accompanied by subsequent reduction in adiponectin and adiponectin receptor (adipoR)1 expression. Under in vivo conditions of diabetes type 1, maternal adiponectin levels were up-regulated in serum and endometrium. Embryonic CREB expression was altered in a cell lineage-specific pattern. Although in EB cells CREB localization did not change, it was translocated from the nucleus into the cytosol in trophoblast (TB) cells. In TB, adiponectin expression was increased (diabetic 427.8 ± 59.3 pg/mL vs normoinsulinaemic 143.9 ± 26.5 pg/mL), whereas it was no longer measureable in the EB. Analysis of embryonic adipoRs showed an increased expression of adipoR1 and no changes in adipoR2 transcription. We conclude that the transcription factors CREB and ATFs vitally participate in embryo-maternal cross talk before implantation in a cell lineage-specific manner. Embryonic CREB/ATFs act as insulin/IGF sensors. Lack of insulin is compensated by a CREB-mediated adiponectin expression, which may maintain glucose uptake in blastocysts grown in diabetic mothers.
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Levinson-Dushnik, M., e N. Benvenisty. "Involvement of hepatocyte nuclear factor 3 in endoderm differentiation of embryonic stem cells." Molecular and Cellular Biology 17, n.º 7 (julho de 1997): 3817–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mcb.17.7.3817.

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The transcription factors of the hepatocyte nuclear factor 3 (HNF3) family, which are active in the liver, are expressed early during endoderm differentiation. To study their involvement in early murine development, we examined their role in embryonic stem (ES) cells. HNF3alpha or HNF3beta mRNA transcripts were not detected in ES cells before differentiation, and only low levels of HNF3beta mRNA were detected at a late stage of differentiation of ES cells to embryoid bodies (EB) (20 days after induction of differentiation). To examine the consequences of overexpressing HNF3alpha or -beta in ES cells, we transfected the two genes into these cells and determined the levels of expression of tissue-specific genes during EB differentiation. Specifically, we examined expression of albumin, cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR), phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK), alpha1-antitrypsin, transthyretin, zeta-globin, and neurofilament 68kd as markers for different cell lineages. Overexpression of HNF3beta (and to a lesser extent of HNF3alpha) induced the expression of genes associated with endodermal lineage, namely, the genes for CFTR and albumin, but did not induce the expression of genes involved in late endoderm differentiation, such as the genes for PEPCK and alpha1-antitrypsin. Moreover, expression of HNF1beta was highly induced in HNF3-overexpressing cells, while expression of HNF1alpha and HNF4 was only mildly induced in these cells. Therefore, HNF3alpha and -beta seem to be involved in early endoderm differentiation of ES cells and together with other developmental factors are apparently needed for the induction of the endodermal lineage in vivo.
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Wang, Dong, Shi-Ping Li, Jin-Sheng Fu, Sheng Zhang, Lin Bai e Li Guo. "Resveratrol defends blood-brain barrier integrity in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis mice". Journal of Neurophysiology 116, n.º 5 (1 de novembro de 2016): 2173–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/jn.00510.2016.

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The mouse autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), an experimental model of multiple sclerosis (MS), is primarily characterized as dysfunction of the blood-brain barrier (BBB). Resveratrol exhibits anti-inflammatory, antioxidative, and neuroprotective activities. We investigated the beneficial effects of resveratrol in protecting the integrity of the BBB in EAE mice and observed improved clinical outcome in the EAE mice after resveratrol treatment. Evans blue (EB) extravasation was used to detect the disruption of BBB. Western blot were used to detected the tight junction proteins and adhesion molecules zonula occludens-1 (ZO-1), occludin, ICAM-1, and VCAM-1. Inflammatory factors inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), IL-1β, and arginase 1 were evaluated by quantitative RT-PCR (qPCR) and IL-10 by ELISA. NADPH oxidase (NOX) levels were evaluated by qPCR, and its activity was analyzed by lucigenin-derived chemiluminescence. Resveratrol at doses of 25 and 50 mg/kg produced a dose-dependent decrease in EAE paralysis and EB leakage, ameliorated EAE-induced loss of tight junction proteins ZO-1, occludin, and claudin-5, as well as repressed the EAE-induced increase in adhesion proteins ICAM-1 and VCAM-1. In addition, resveratrol suppressed the EAE-induced overexpression of proinflammatory transcripts iNOS and IL-1β and upregulated the expression of anti-inflammatory transcripts arginase 1 and IL-10 cytokine in the brain. Furthermore, resveratrol downregulated the overexpressed NOX2 and NOX4 in the brain and suppressed NADPH activity. Resveratrol ameliorates the clinical severity of MS through maintaining the BBB integrity in EAE mice.
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