7 research outputs found
SILAC labeling coupled to shotgun proteomics analysis of membrane proteins of liver stem/hepatocyte allows to candidate the inhibition of TGF-beta pathway as causal to differentiation
International audienceDespite extensive research on hepatic cells precursors and their differentiated states, much remains to be learned about the mechanism underlying the self-renewal and differentiation. We apply the SILAC (stable isotope labeling by amino acids in cell culture) approach to quantitatively compare the membrane proteome of the resident liver stem cells (RLSCs) and their progeny spontaneously differentiated into epithelial/hepatocyte (RLSCdH). By means of nanoLC-MALDI-TOF/TOF approach, we identified and quantified 248 membrane proteins and 57 of them were found modulated during hepatocyte differentiation. Functional clustering of differentially expressed proteins by Ingenuity Pathway Analysis revealed that the most of membrane proteins found to be modulated are involved in cell-to-cell signaling/interaction pathways. Moreover, the upstream prediction analysis of proteins involved in cell-to-cell signaling and interaction unveiled that the activation of the mesenchymal to epithelial transition (MET), by the repression of TGFB1/Slug signaling, may be causal to hepatocyte differentiation. Taken together, this study increases the understanding of the underlying mechanisms modulating the complex biological processes of hepatic stem cell proliferation and differentiation
Epigenetic control of EMT/MET dynamics: HNF4α impacts DNMT3s through miRs-29
Background and aims: Epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and the reverse mesenchymal-to-epithelial
transition (MET) are manifestations of cellular plasticity that imply a dynamic and profound gene expression
reprogramming. While a major epigenetic code controlling the coordinated regulation of a whole transcriptional
profile is guaranteed by DNA methylation, DNA methyltransferase (DNMT) activities in EMT/MET dynamics are
still largely unexplored.
Here, we investigated the molecular mechanisms directly linking HNF4α, the master effector of MET, to the
regulation of both de novo of DNMT 3A and 3B.
Methods: Correlation among EMT/MET markers, microRNA29 and DNMT3s expression was evaluated by
RT-qPCR, Western blotting and immunocytochemical analysis. Functional roles of microRNAs and DNMT3s
were tested by anti-miRs, microRNA precursors and chemical inhibitors. ChIP was utilized for investigating
HNF4α DNA binding activity.
Results: HNF4α silencing was sufficient to induce positive modulation of DNMT3B, in in vitro differentiated
hepatocytes as well as in vivo hepatocyte-specific Hnf4α knockout mice, and DNMT3A, in vitro, but not
DNMT1. In exploring the molecular mechanisms underlying these observations, evidence have been gathered
for (i) the inverse correlation between DNMT3 levels and the expression of their regulators miR-29a and miR-
29b and (ii) the role of HNF4α as a direct regulator of miR-29a-b transcription. Notably, during TGFβ-induced
EMT, DNMT3s' pivotal function has been proved, thus suggesting the need for the repression of these DNMTs
in the maintenance of a differentiated phenotype.
Conclusions: HNF4α maintains hepatocyte identity by regulating miR-29a and -29b expression, which in turn
control epigenetic modifications by limiting DNMT3A and DNMT3B levels
Pathogenetic investigations on the enteric nervous system plexuses of sarda breed sheep with different PrP genotypes following oral experimental scrapie infection
We investigated the ileal myenteric (MPs) and submucosal plexuses (SMPs) of 32 Sarda breed sheep carrying
different PrP genotypes (ARQ/ARQ, ARQ/AHQ, ARQ/ARR, ARR/ARR), which had been orally dosed with
scrapie at 8 months of age and euthanized at definite time intervals post-infection (p.i.)