102 research outputs found

    The diacylglycerol kinase Ī±/Atypical PKC/Ī²1 integrin pathway in SDF-1Ī± mammary carcinoma invasiveness

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    Diacylglycerol kinase Ī± (DGKĪ±), by phosphorylating diacylglycerol into phosphatidic acid, provides a key signal driving cell migration and matrix invasion. We previously demonstrated that in epithelial cells activation of DGKĪ± activity promotes cytoskeletal remodeling and matrix invasion by recruiting atypical PKC at ruffling sites and by promoting RCP-mediated recycling of Ī±5Ī²1 integrin to the tip of pseudopods. In here we investigate the signaling pathway by which DGKĪ± mediates SDF-1Ī±-induced matrix invasion of MDA-MB-231 invasive breast carcinoma cells. Indeed we showed that, following SDF-1Ī± stimulation, DGKĪ± is activated and localized at cell protrusion, thus promoting their elongation and mediating SDF-1Ī± induced MMP-9 metalloproteinase secretion and matrix invasion. Phosphatidic acid generated by DGKĪ± promotes localization at cell protrusions of atypical PKCs which play an essential role downstream of DGKĪ± by promoting Rac-mediated protrusion elongation and localized recruitment of Ī²1 integrin and MMP-9. We finally demonstrate that activation of DGKĪ±, atypical PKCs signaling and Ī²1 integrin are all essential for MDA-MB-231 invasiveness. These data indicates the existence of a SDF-1Ī± induced DGKĪ± - atypical PKC - Ī²1 integrin signaling pathway, which is essential for matrix invasion of carcinoma cells

    ACYLATED AND UNACYLATED GHRELIN IMPAIR SKELETAL MUSCLE ATROPHY IN MICE.

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    Cachexia is a wasting syndrome associated with cancer, AIDS, and multiple sclerosis, and several other disease states. It is characterized by weight loss, fatigue, loss of appetite and skeletal muscle atrophy and is associated with poor patient prognosis, making it an important treatment target. Ghrelin is a peptide hormone that stimulates growth hormone (GH) release and positive energy balance through binding to the receptor GHSR-1a. Only acylated ghrelin (AG), but not the unacylated form (UnAG), can bind GHSR-1a; however, UnAG and AG share several GHSR-1aindependent biological activities. Here we investigated whether UnAG and AG could protect against skeletal muscle atrophy in a GHSR-1a-independent manner. We found that both AG and UnAG inhibited dexamethasone-induced skeletal muscle atrophy and atrogene expression through PI3K\u3b2-, mTORC2-, and p38-mediated pathways in myotubes. Up-regulation of circulating UnAG in mice impaired skeletal muscle atrophy induced by either fasting or denervation without stimulating muscle hypertrophy and GHSR-1a-mediated activation of the GH/IGF-1 axis. In Ghsrdeficient mice, both AG and UnAG induced phosphorylation of Akt in skeletal muscle and impaired fasting-induced atrophy. These results demonstrate that AG and UnAG act on a common, unidentified receptor to block skeletal muscle atrophy in a GH-independent manner

    Growth Hormone Secretagogues Protect Mouse Cardiomyocytes from in vitro Ischemia/Reperfusion Injury through Regulation of Intracellular Calcium

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    Background: Ischemic heart disease is a leading cause of mortality. To study this disease, ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) models are widely used to mimic the process of transient blockage and subsequent recovery of cardiac coronary blood supply. We aimed to determine whether the presence of the growth hormone secretagogues, ghrelin and hexarelin, would protect/improve the function of heart from I/R injury and to examine the underlying mechanisms. Methodology/Principal Findings: Isolated hearts from adult male mice underwent 20 min global ischemia and 30 min reperfusion using a Langendorff apparatus. Ghrelin (10 nM) or hexarelin (1 nM) was introduced into the perfusion system either 10 min before or after ischemia, termed pre- and post-treatments. In freshly isolated cardiomyocytes from these hearts, single cell shortening, intracellular calcium ([Ca ] ) transients and caffeine-releasable sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca were measured. In addition, RT-PCR and Western blots were used to examine the expression level of GHS receptor type 1a (GHS-R1a), and phosphorylated phospholamban (p-PLB), respectively. Ghrelin and hexarelin pre- or post-treatments prevented the significant reduction in the cell shortening, [Ca ] transient amplitude and caffeine-releasable SR Ca content after I/R through recovery of p-PLB. GHS-R1a antagonists, [D-Lys3]-GHRP-6 (200 nM) and BIM28163 (100 nM), completely blocked the effects of GHS on both cell shortening and [Ca ] transients. Conclusion/Significance: Through activation of GHS-R1a, ghrelin and hexarelin produced a positive inotropic effect on ischemic cardiomyocytes and protected them from I/R injury probably by protecting or recovering p-PLB (and therefore SR Ca content) to allow the maintenance or recovery of normal cardiac contractility. These observations provide supporting evidence for the potential therapeutic application of ghrelin and hexarelin in patients with cardiac I/R injury

    Polymorphisms of genes coding for ghrelin and its receptor in relation to colorectal cancer risk: a two-step gene-wide case-control study

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Ghrelin, an endogenous ligand for the growth hormone secretagogue receptor (GHSR), has two major functions: the stimulation of the growth hormone production and the stimulation of food intake. Accumulating evidence also indicates a role of ghrelin in cancer development.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We conducted a case-control study to examine the association of common genetic variants in the genes coding for ghrelin (GHRL) and its receptor (GHSR) with colorectal cancer risk. Pairwise tagging was used to select the 11 polymorphisms included in the study. The selected polymorphisms were genotyped in 680 cases and 593 controls from the Czech Republic.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We found two SNPs associated with lower risk of colorectal cancer, namely SNPs rs27647 and rs35683. We replicated the two hits, in additional 569 cases and 726 controls from Germany.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>A joint analysis of the two populations indicated that the T allele of rs27647 SNP exerted a protective borderline effect (P<sub>trend </sub>= 0.004).</p

    A Concerted Kinase Interplay Identifies PPARĪ³ as a Molecular Target of Ghrelin Signaling in Macrophages

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    The peroxisome proliferator-activator receptor PPARĪ³ plays an essential role in vascular biology, modulating macrophage function and atherosclerosis progression. Recently, we have described the beneficial effect of combined activation of the ghrelin/GHS-R1a receptor and the scavenger receptor CD36 to induce macrophage cholesterol release through transcriptional activation of PPARĪ³. Although the interplay between CD36 and PPARĪ³ in atherogenesis is well recognized, the contribution of the ghrelin receptor to regulate PPARĪ³ remains unknown. Here, we demonstrate that ghrelin triggers PPARĪ³ activation through a concerted signaling cascade involving Erk1/2 and Akt kinases, resulting in enhanced expression of downstream effectors LXRĪ± and ABC sterol transporters in human macrophages. These effects were associated with enhanced PPARĪ³ phosphorylation independently of the inhibitory conserved serine-84. Src tyrosine kinase Fyn was identified as being recruited to GHS-R1a in response to ghrelin, but failure of activated Fyn to enhance PPARĪ³ Ser-84 specific phosphorylation relied on the concomitant recruitment of docking protein Dok-1, which prevented optimal activation of the Erk1/2 pathway. Also, substitution of Ser-84 preserved the ghrelin-induced PPARĪ³ activity and responsiveness to Src inhibition, supporting a mechanism independent of Ser-84 in PPARĪ³ response to ghrelin. Consistent with this, we found that ghrelin promoted the PI3-K/Akt pathway in a GĪ±q-dependent manner, resulting in Akt recruitment to PPARĪ³, enhanced PPARĪ³ phosphorylation and activation independently of Ser-84, and increased expression of LXRĪ± and ABCA1/G1. Collectively, these results illustrate a complex interplay involving Fyn/Dok-1/Erk and GĪ±q/PI3-K/Akt pathways to transduce in a concerted manner responsiveness of PPARĪ³ to ghrelin in macrophages

    Understanding 'non-genetic' inheritance : insights from molecular-evolutionary crosstalk

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    The idea for this paper was initially proposed by I.A.-K. and was further developed by all authors in a workshop generously funded by grant No 789240 from the European Research Council (ERC) to F.J.W. S.E.S. acknowledges support from Wesleyan University and The John Templeton Foundation.Understanding the evolutionary and ecological roles of 'non-genetic' inheritance (NGI) is daunting due to the complexity and diversity of epigenetic mechanisms. We draw on insights from molecular and evolutionary biology perspectives to identify three general features of 'non-genetic' inheritance systems: (i) they are functionally interdependent with, rather than separate from, DNA sequence; (ii) precise mechanisms vary phylogenetically and operationally; and (iii) epigenetic elements are probabilistic, interactive regulatory factors and not deterministic 'epialleles' with defined genomic locations and effects. We discuss each of these features and offer recommendations for future empirical and theoretical research that implements a unifying inherited gene regulation (IGR) approach to studies of 'non-genetic' inheritance.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
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