75 research outputs found

    Sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor 3 regulates the transendothelial transport of HDL and LDL in opposite ways

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    Aims: The entry of lipoproteins from blood into the arterial wall is a rate-limiting step in atherosclerosis. It is controversial whether this happens by filtration or regulated transendothelial transport.Because sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) preserves the endothelial barrier, we investigated in vivo and in vitro, whether S1P and its cognate S1P receptor 3 (S1P3) regulate the transendothelial transport of lipoproteins. Methods and results: Compared to apoE-haploinsufficient mice (CTRL), apoE-haploinsufficient mice with additional endothelium specific knock-in of S1P3 (S1P3-iECKI) showed decreased transport of LDL and Evan's Blue but increased transport of HDL from blood into the peritoneal cave. After 30 weeks of high-fat diet feeding, S1P3-iECKI mice had lower levels of non-HDL-cholesterol and less atherosclerosis than CTRL mice. In vitro, stimulation with an S1P3 agonist increased the transport of 125I-HDL but decreased the transport of 125I-LDL through human aortic endothelial cells (HAECs). Conversely, inhibition or knock-down of S1P3 decreased the transport of 125I-HDL but increased the transport of 125I-LDL. Silencing of SCARB1 encoding scavenger receptor B1 (SR-BI) abrogated the stimulation of 125I-HDL transport by the S1P3 agonist. The transendothelial transport of 125I-LDL was decreased by silencing of SCARB1 or ACVLR1 encoding activin-like kinase 1 but not by interference with LDLR. None of the three knock-downs prevented the stimulatory effect of S1P3 inhibition on transendothelial 125I-LDL transport. Conclusion: S1P3 regulates the transendothelial transport of HDL and LDL oppositely by SR-BI-dependent and SR-BI-independent mechanisms, respectively. This divergence supports a contention that lipoproteins pass the endothelial barrier by specifically regulated mechanisms rather than passive filtration

    Clusterin enhances migration and invasion of prostate cancer cells through an isoform-specific Akt2/miR-190/PHLPP1 circuit

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    During prostate cancer progression cancer cells undergo a variety of molecular alterations that lead to the acquisition of uncontrolled growth properties. One such set of molecular alterations is mediated by the PI3K/Akt signaling pathway. Here, we describe a regulatory system that modulates the phosphoinosited 3-kinase/Akt (PI3K/Akt) pathway downstream of secreted Clusterin (sCLU) in normal and cancer prostate cells. The overexpression of sCLU is very frequent in prostate cancer, and can lead to Akt-activation. This prompted us to investigate how sCLU overexpression influences PI3K/Akt signaling network in a study model represented by human epithelial prostate PNT1A cells stably transfected with sCLU or with empty vector alone. We found that CLU cells show a marked differential phosphorylation of several members of the PI3K/Akt cascade, and in particular of Akt2. Moreover, we found that the phosphatase PHLPP1, known to dephosphorylate Akt2 at S473, is severely downregulated in CLU compared to MOCK cells. We thus investigated whether sCLU alters PHLPP1 protein stability or expression. Our results indicate that sCLU indeed stimulates PHLPP1 degradation by β-TrCP. Interestingly, we further demonstrated that sCLU alters also PHLPP1 through the negative regulator miR-190. Next, because sCLU has been reported to inhibit or to stimulate the aggressive behavior of cancer cells depending on the cell model, we investigated the effects of CLU overexpression or addition of recombinant Clusterin to the medium on cell migration and invasion in PNT1A cell line, which is not expected to display an invasive phenotype, and in the cancer prostate epithelial cell lines LNCaP and PC3. The result was extremely clear: not only CLU overexpression gives PNT1A cells the same behavior of wild-type PC3 cells, but also increases the migration and invasion index of all the above cell models by two to four times, compared to controls. As a confirmation, in the same model silencing of Clusterin abrogates migration of CLU cells. Next, the effect of Akt single-isoform silencing on cell migration was explored. While silencing of Akt1 affected migration only slightly, silencing of Akt2 prevented migration of both MOCK and CLU cells completely. The same result was obtained by pharmacological inhibition of Akt2. All together our results, clearly demonstrate for the first time that Clusterin can switch the low migration phenotype of normal prostate cells towards a high migration phenotype through the modulation of the expression of the PHLPP1 and, in turn, the activity of Akt2

    Low walk-off Kerr-shutter using a dispersion-shifted lead silicate holey fiber

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    We present, for the first time to our knowledge, the use of a dispersion-shifted soft-glass holey fiber (HF) in a Kerr-shutter configuration. Wavelength conversion of 10-Gb/s data pulses is achieved in the C-band using just 2.1 m of a lead-silicate HF with a nonlinear parameter gamma of 164 W-1 ldr km-1. The low dispersion and the short length of the fiber enable short switching windows to be realized

    Tolerance to laser frequency deviation of Nyquist-WDM and Time-Frequency-Packing modulation formats

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    Nyquist-WDM and Time-Frequency-Packing tolerance to ICI arising from laser frequency deviation from nominal value is investigated through simulations. Performance comparison at 6.35bit/s/Hz Spectral Efficiency shows that TFP exhibits higher robustness to ICI and OSNR degradation

    Spectrally efficient optical communications

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    The paper reviews most diffuse techniques used for increasing spectral efficiency in optical communication, considering different network segments. Time-frequency packing will be described, and compared to Nyquist wavelength-division multiplexing and orthogonal frequencydivision multiplexing. © 2015 OSA
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