10 research outputs found

    The 4D nucleome project

    Get PDF

    Comparison of l-monosodium glutamate and l-amino acid taste in rats

    No full text
    T1R2/T1R3 heterodimers are selectively responsive to sweet substances whereas T1R1/T1R3 receptors are selective for umami substances, represented by monosodium glutamate (MSG), and for l-amino acids. If a single receptor is responsible for detection of umami and l-amino acids, then it would be predicted that MSG and l-amino acids elicit similar tastes in rats. The present study compared the taste profile of MSG with four amino acids (glycine, l-proline, l-serine and l-arginine) using conditioned taste aversion, detection threshold, and taste discrimination methods. These experiments were designed to either reduce or neutralize the taste of sodium associated with MSG and the other amino acids. Detection threshold studies showed that rats were most sensitive to l-arginine and least sensitive to l-proline. Glycine and l-serine thresholds were similar to those previously reported for MSG. Like MSG, a conditioned taste aversion to each of the four amino acids generalized to sucrose in the presence of amiloride, a sodium channel blocker. Rats showed moderate generalization of aversion between MSG and l-arginine, suggesting that these two amino acids taste only moderately alike. However, the taste aversion experiments indicated that glycine, l-serine, and l-proline elicit taste sensations similar to MSG when amiloride is present. Discrimination experiments further compared the tastes of these three amino acids with MSG. When the sodium taste associated with MSG was reduced or neutralized, glycine and l-proline elicited tastes very similar but not identical to the taste of MSG. Low (but not higher) concentrations of l-serine were also difficult for rats to discriminate from MSG. While there are taste qualities common to all of these amino acids, the perceptual differences found in this study, combined with previous reports, suggest either multiple taste receptors and/or multiple signaling pathways may be involved in umami and amino acid taste perception in rats. © 2007 IBRO

    Expansion of NEUROD2 phenotypes to include developmental delay without seizures

    No full text
    De novo heterozygous variants in the brain-specific transcription factor Neuronal Differentiation Factor 2 (NEUROD2) have been recently associated with early-onset epileptic encephalopathy and developmental delay. Here, we report an adolescent with developmental delay without seizures who was found to have a novel de novo heterozygous NEUROD2 missense variant, p.(Leu163Pro). Functional testing using an in vivo assay of neuronal differentiation in Xenopus laevis tadpoles demonstrated that the patient variant of NEUROD2 displays minimal protein activity, strongly suggesting a loss of function effect. In contrast, a second rare NEUROD2 variant, p.(Ala235Thr), identified in an adolescent with developmental delay but lacking parental studies for inheritance, showed normal in vivo NEUROD2 activity. We thus provide clinical, genetic, and functional evidence that NEUROD2 variants can lead to developmental delay without accompanying early-onset seizures, and demonstrate how functional testing can complement genetic data when determining variant pathogenicity

    Human 343delT HSPB5 chaperone associated with early-onset skeletal myopathy causes defects in protein solubility.

    Get PDF
    Mutations of HSPB5 (also known as CRYAB or αB-crystallin), a bona fide heat shock protein and molecular chaperone encoded by the HSPB5 (crystallin, alpha B) gene, are linked to various multisystem disorders featuring variable combinations of cataracts, cardiomyopathy, and skeletal myopathy. This study aims at investigating the pathological mechanisms involved in an early onset myofibrillar myopathy manifesting in a child harboring a homozygous recessive mutation in HSPB5, 343delT. To study HSPB5 343delT protein dynamics, we utilize model cell culture systems including induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) derived from the 343delT patient (343delT/343delT) along with isogenic, heterozygous, gene-corrected control cells (WT KI/343delT), and BHK21 cells, a cell line lacking endogenous HSPB5 expression. 343delT/343delT and WT KI/343delT iPSC-derived skeletal myotubes (iSKMs) and cardiomyocytes (iCMs) did not express detectable levels of 343delT protein, contributable to extreme insolubility of the mutant protein. Overexpression of HSPB5 343delT resulted in insoluble mutant protein aggregates and induction of a cellular stress response. Co-expression of 343delT with WT prevented visible aggregation of 343delT and improved its solubility. Additionally, in vitro refolding of 343delT in the presence of WT rescued its solubility. We demonstrate an interaction between WT and 343delT both in vitro and within cells. These data support a loss of function model for the myopathy observed in the patient, as the insoluble mutant would be unavailable to perform normal functions of HSPB5, though additional gain-of-function effects of the mutant protein cannot be excluded. Additionally, our data highlights the solubilization of 343delT by WT, concordant with the recessive inheritance of the disease and absence of symptoms in carrier individuals

    Human 343delT HSPB5 chaperone associated with early-onset skeletal myopathy causes defects in protein solubility.

    Get PDF
    Mutations of HSPB5 (also known as CRYAB or αB-crystallin), a bona fide heat shock protein and molecular chaperone encoded by the HSPB5 (crystallin, alpha B) gene, are linked to various multisystem disorders featuring variable combinations of cataracts, cardiomyopathy, and skeletal myopathy. This study aims at investigating the pathological mechanisms involved in an early onset myofibrillar myopathy manifesting in a child harboring a homozygous recessive mutation in HSPB5, 343delT. To study HSPB5 343delT protein dynamics, we utilize model cell culture systems including induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) derived from the 343delT patient (343delT/343delT) along with isogenic, heterozygous, gene-corrected control cells (WT KI/343delT), and BHK21 cells, a cell line lacking endogenous HSPB5 expression. 343delT/343delT and WT KI/343delT iPSC-derived skeletal myotubes (iSKMs) and cardiomyocytes (iCMs) did not express detectable levels of 343delT protein, contributable to extreme insolubility of the mutant protein. Overexpression of HSPB5 343delT resulted in insoluble mutant protein aggregates and induction of a cellular stress response. Co-expression of 343delT with WT prevented visible aggregation of 343delT and improved its solubility. Additionally, in vitro refolding of 343delT in the presence of WT rescued its solubility. We demonstrate an interaction between WT and 343delT both in vitro and within cells. These data support a loss of function model for the myopathy observed in the patient, as the insoluble mutant would be unavailable to perform normal functions of HSPB5, though additional gain-of-function effects of the mutant protein cannot be excluded. Additionally, our data highlights the solubilization of 343delT by WT, concordant with the recessive inheritance of the disease and absence of symptoms in carrier individuals

    Ways of improving precise knock-in by genome-editing technologies

    No full text
    corecore