9 research outputs found
Synthesis, chaperoning, and metabolism of proteins are regulated by NT-3/TrkC signaling in the medulloblastoma cell line DAOY.
The human medulloblastoma cell line DAOY was transfected with Tropomyosin receptor kinase (TrkC), a marker for good prognostic outcome. Following TrkC-activation by its ligand neurotrophin-3, protein extracts from DAOY cells were run on 2DE with subsequent MALDI-TOF-TOF analysis and quantification in order to detect downstream effectors. Protein levels of translational, splicing, processing, chaperone, protein handling, and metabolism machineries were shown to depend on neurotrophin-3-induced TrkC activation probably representing pharmacological targets
End-point effector stress mediators in neuroimmune interactions: their role in immune system homeostasis and autoimmune pathology
Much evidence has identified a direct anatomical and functional link between the brain and the immune system, with glucocorticoids (GCs), catecholamines (CAs), and neuropeptide Y (NPY) as its end-point mediators. This suggests the important role of these mediators in immune system homeostasis and the pathogenesis of inflammatory autoimmune diseases. However, although it is clear that these mediators can modulate lymphocyte maturation and the activity of distinct immune cell types, their putative role in the pathogenesis of autoimmune disease is not yet completely understood. We have contributed to this field by discovering the influence of CAs and GCs on fine-tuning thymocyte negative selection and, in particular, by pointing to the putative CA-mediated mechanisms underlying this influence. Furthermore, we have shown that CAs are implicated in the regulation of regulatory T-cell development in the thymus. Moreover, our investigations related to macrophage biology emphasize the complex interaction between GCs, CAs and NPY in the modulation of macrophage functions and their putative significance for the pathogenesis of autoimmune inflammatory diseases
The Glial Differentiation Factor Nuclear Factor One B (Nfib) Induces Differentiation and Inhibits Growth of Glioblastoma.
International audienceThe molecule CD90 is a N-glycosylated, glycophosphatidylinositol anchored cell surface protein, originally described on thymocytes. CD90 has been considered as a surrogate marker for a variety of stem cells and has recently been reported on glioblastoma stem cells. CD90 is also expressed on T lymphocytes, endothelial cells, fibroblasts and neurons. The function of CD90 is not fully elucidated. CD90 has been involved in cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions, in neurite outgrowth, T cell activation and apoptosis. In this study, we confirmed the expression of CD90 on human glioblastoma stem-like cells from serum-free neurosphere cultures. We also observed RNA and protein CD90 expression on primary cell lines from FSC-containing culture (adherent cell lines) and on freshly prepared glioblastoma specimen. In order to study the function of CD90 on glioblastoma cells, we used a silencing strategy to decrease the expression of CD90 on the immortalized U251 cell line. We then compared the viability, the tumor growth and the migration property of the wild-type CD90+ U251 cells and CD90 down-regulated U251 clones. The decrease of CD90 expression did not affect the viability and the tumor growth of U251 cells. In contrast, down-regulation of CD90 mediated the decreased ability of tumor cell migration using both scratch wound healing and boyden chamber migration assays. Experiments are currently on going to test the effect of CD90 expression on tumorigenicity in mice models. In total, this study might lead to better understand the role of CD90 on the pathology in particular in term of tumor migration/invasion of human glioblastoma