44 research outputs found

    Cell Mates

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    Catalog for the exhibition Cell Mates held at the Seton Hall University Walsh Gallery, June 3 - July 18, 2013. Curated by Jeanne Brasile and Lisbeth Murray. Includes the essays The Art of Science and the Science of Art by Jeanne Brasile and Incubating Hybrid Art by Lisbeth Murray. Includes color illustrations

    Synchronization in G0/G1 enhances the mitogenic response of cells overexpressing the human insulin receptor A isoform to insulin

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    Evaluating mitogenic signaling specifically through the human insulin receptor (IR) is relevant for the preclinical safety assessment of developmental insulin analogs. It is known that overexpression of IR sensitizes cells to the mitogenic effects of insulin, but it is essentially unknown how mitogenic responses can be optimized to allow practical use of such recombinant cell lines for preclinical safety testing. We constitutively overexpressed the short isoform of the human insulin receptor (hIR-A, exon 11-negative) in L6 rat skeletal myoblasts. Because the mitogenic effect of growth factors such as insulin is expected to act in G0/G1, promoting S-phase entry, we developed a combined topoinhibition + serum deprivation strategy to explore the effect of G0/G1 synchronization as an independent parameter in the context of serum deprivation, the latter being routinely used to reduce background in mitogenicity assays. G0/G1 synchronization significantly improved the mitogenic responses of L6-hIR cells to insulin, measured by 3H-thymidine incorporation. Comparison with the parental L6 cells using phospho-mitogen-activated protein kinase, phospho-AKT, as well as 3H-thymidine incorporation end points supported that the majority of the mitogenic effect of insulin in L6-hIR cells was mediated by the overexpressed hIR-A. Using the optimized L6-hIR assay, we found that the X-10 insulin analog was more mitogenic than native human insulin, supporting that X-10 exhibits increased mitogenic signaling through the hIR-A. In summary, this study provides the first demonstration that serum deprivation may not be sufficient, and G0/G1 synchronization may be required to obtain optimal responsiveness of hIR-overexpressing cell lines for preclinical safety testing

    Active stress kinases in proliferating endothelial cells associated with cytoskeletal structures.

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    It has become increasingly clear that stress-activated protein kinases have cytoplasmic substrates in addition to well-established transcription factor substrates in cell nuclei. The present study documented specific cytoplasmic locations of these enzymes in proliferating vascular cells. Immunofluorescent staining for active c-jun NH2-terminal kinase (JNK), the precipitation of JNK with microfilaments, and the loss of fiber-associated active JNK after cytochalasin treatment, but not nocodazole treatment, together indicate that active JNK is associated with stress fibers. The lack of complete scaffold colocalization and the total lack of immediate upsteam kinase colocalization along with the inability of JNK inhibitors to alter JNK-microfilament associations suggest that the microfilament association is not simply involved in enzyme activation. In addition, active p38 was found along with vinculin in focal adhesions. Although the p38 in focal adhesions could also be disrupted by cytochalasin treatment, it remained stable after nocodazole treatment. These results support the hypothesis that vascular cell stress kinase enzymes are important for signal transduction in the cytoplasm. The localization of active stress-activated protein kinases to specific cytoskeletal structures in proliferating cells suggests that subsets of these enzymes are involved in signal transduction to and/or from the cytoskeleton under conditions that include vascular cell proliferation
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