3 research outputs found
Transcriptional activation of tyrosinase gene by human placental sphingolipid
The sphingolipids, a class of complex bioactive
lipids, are involved in diverse cellular functions such
as proliferation, differentiation, and apoptosis as well as
growth inhibition. Recently sphingosylphosphorylcholine
(SPC), sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P), and C2-ceramide
(C2-Cer), sphingolipid containing acetic acid are emerging
as melanogenic regulators. A bioactive sphingolipid (PSL)
was isolated from hydroalcoholic extract of fresh term human
placenta and it induced melanogenesis in an in vitro
culture of mouse melanoma B16F10 cells. Tyrosinase, the
rate-limiting enzyme for melanogenesis, is required to be
upregulated for the increased melanin production. The expression
of tyrosinase, both at protein as well as mRNA
level, was higher in the PSL treated B16F10 cells as evidenced
by Western blot and RT-PCR analysis. Actinomycin
D and cycloheximide, inhibitors of transcription and translation,
respectively, inhibited PSL-induced tyrosinase activity
and its protein expression showing decrease in melanogenesis,
correspondingly. The activity of GFP coupled tyrosinase
promoter was upregulated in transfected B16F10 cells after
treating with PSL as determined by fluorescence microscopy,
fluorometric analysis, and Western blot. These results, thus,
suggested that PSL upregulated tyrosinase gene expression
at transcription level through promoter activation to show
increased melanogenesis. Therefore, PSL as an inducer of
melanogenesis might account for the recovery of pigment in depigmentation disorder
Alterations of intracellular pH homeostasis in apoptosis: origins and roles
International audienceIntracellular pH (pHi) has an important role in the maintenance of normal cell function, and hence this parameter has to be tightly controlled within a narrow range, largely through the activity of transporters located at the plasma membrane. These transporters can be modulated by endogenous or exogenous molecules as well as, in some pathological situations, leading to pHi changes that have been implicated in both cell proliferation and cell death. Whereas intracellular alkalinization seems to be a common feature of proliferative processes, the precise role of pHi in apoptosis is still unclear. The present review gathers the most recent advances along with previous data on both the origin and the role of pHi alterations in apoptosis and highlights the major concerns that merit further research in the future. Special attention is given to the possible role played by pHi-regulating transporters