46 research outputs found
The Opdc missense mutation of Pax2 has a milder than loss-of-function phenotype
Renal-coloboma syndrome, also known as papillorenal syndrome, is an autosomal dominant human disorder in which optic disc coloboma is associated with kidney abnormalities. Mutations in the paired domain transcription factor PAX2 have been found to be the underlying cause of this disease. Disease severity varies between patients, and in some cases, renal hypoplasia has been found in the absence of any retinal defects. Here we report an N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea-induced mouse mutation, Opdc, which is an isoleucinetothreonine missense mutation, I40T, in the first α-helix of the Pax2 paired domain. The mutant protein binds target DNA sequences less strongly than the wild-type protein and acts poorly to transactivate target promoters in culture. The phenotypic consequence of this mutation on the development of the eye and ear is similar to that reported for null alleles of Pax2. However, in homozygotes, cerebellar development is normal on a genetic background in which loss of Pax2 results in failure of cerebellar formation. Moreover, there is a genetic background effect on the heterozygous phenotype such that on some strain backgrounds, kidney development is unaffected. Opdc is the first hypomorphic mutation reported for Pax2 that differs in phenotype from loss-of-function mutations. These results suggest that PAX2 is a strong candidate gene for cases in which human patients have optic disc coloboma not associated with renal dysplasia
Temporal blastemal cell gene expression analysis in the kidney reveals new Wnt and related signaling pathway genes to be essential for Wilms' tumor onset
Wilms' tumors (WTs) originate from metanephric blastema cells that are unable to complete differentiation, resulting in triphasic tumors composed of epithelial, stromal and blastemal cells, with the latter harboring molecular characteristics similar to those of the earliest kidney development stages. Precise regulation of Wnt and related signaling pathways has been shown to be crucial for correct kidney differentiation. In this study, the gene expression profile of Wnt and related pathways was assessed in laser-microdissected blastemal cells in WTs and differentiated kidneys, in human and in four temporal kidney differentiation stages (i.e. E15.5, E17.5, P1.5 and P7.5) in mice, using an orthologous cDNA microarray platform. A signaling pathway-based gene signature was shared between cells of WT and of earliest kidney differentiation stages, revealing genes involved in the interruption of blastemal cell differentiation in WT. Reverse transcription-quantitative PCR showed high robustness of the microarray data demonstrating 75 and 56% agreement in the initial and independent sample sets, respectively. The protein expression of CRABP2, IGF2, GRK7, TESK1, HDGF, WNT5B, FZD2 and TIMP3 was characterized in WTs and in a panel of human fetal kidneys displaying remarkable aspects of differentiation, which was recapitulated in the tumor. Taken together, this study reveals new genes candidate for triggering WT onset and for therapeutic treatment targets
WT1 gene expression as a prognostic marker in advanced serous epithelial ovarian carcinoma: an immunohistochemical study
BACKGROUND: WT1 is a tumor suppressor gene responsible for Wilms' tumor. WT1 reactivity is limited to ovarian serous carcinomas. Recent studies have shown that WT1 plays an important role in the progression of disease and indicates a poorer prognosis of human malignancies such as acute myeloid leukemia and breast cancer. The aims of this study were to determine the survival and recurrence-free survival of women with advanced serous epithelial ovarian carcinoma in relation to WT1 gene expression. METHODS: The study accrued women over an 18-year period, from 1987â2004. During the study period, 163 patients were diagnosed with advanced serous epithelial ovarian carcinoma and had undergone complete post-operative chemotherapy, but the final study group comprised 99 patients. The records of these women were reviewed and the paraffin-embedded tissue of these women stained with WT1 immunostaining. Survival analysis was performed using Kaplan-Meier and Cox regression methods. RESULTS: Fifty patients showed WT1 staining and forty-nine did not. Five-year survival of non-staining and staining groups were 39.4% and 10.7% (p < 0.00005); five-year recurrence-free survival of these groups were 29.8% and †7.5% (p < 0.00005), respectively. For survival the HR of WT1 staining, adjusted for residual tumor and chemotherapy response, was 1.98 (95% CI 1.28â3.79), and for recurrence-free survival the HR was 3.36 (95% CI 1.60â7.03). The HR for recurrence-free survival was not confounded by any other variables. CONCLUSION: This study suggests that expression of WT1 gene may be indicative of an unfavorable prognosis in patients with advanced serous epithelial ovarian carcinoma
PPARÎČ activation inhibits melanoma cell proliferation involving repression of the Wilmsâ tumour suppressor WT1
Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs) are ligand-activated transcription factors that strongly influence molecular signalling in normal and cancer cells. Although increasing evidence suggests a role of PPARs in skin carcinogenesis, only expression of PPARÎł has been investigated in human melanoma tissues. Activation of PPARα has been shown to inhibit the metastatic potential, whereas stimulation of PPARÎł decreased melanoma cell proliferation. We show here that the third member of the PPAR family, PPARÎČ/ÎŽ is expressed in human melanoma samples. Specific pharmacological activation of PPARÎČ using GW0742 or GW501516 in low concentrations inhibits proliferation of human and murine melanoma cells. Inhibition of proliferation is accompanied by decreased expression of the Wilmsâ tumour suppressor 1 (WT1), which is implicated in melanoma proliferation. We demonstrate that PPARÎČ directly represses WT1 as (1) PPARÎČ activation represses WT1 promoter activity; (2) in chromatin immunoprecipitation and electrophoretic mobility shift assays, we identified a binding element for PPARÎČ in the WT1 promoter; (3) deletion of this binding element abolishes repression by PPARÎČ and (4) the WT1 downstream molecules nestin and zyxin are down-regulated upon PPARÎČ activation. Our findings elucidate a novel mechanism of signalling by ligands of PPARÎČ, which leads to suppression of melanoma cell growth through direct repression of WT1
Predictive methodology as a tool for planning water and wastewater processes
Predictive methodology as a tool for planning water and wastewater processe
Modello geologico-tecnico ed analisi numerica con approccio equivalente continuo della deformazione gravitativa di Monte della Rocchetta (Appennino Centrale, Italia)
A gravity-induced slope deformation has been observed along the eastern slope of the carbonate ridge of Mount Rocchetta (Central Apennines, Italy), near Capo Volturno Springs. This deformation is ascribable to a rock mass creep process which evolves in a rock mass spreading. The engineering-geological model, obtained along a section across the zone of the slope involved in the ongoing deformations, was used to perform a numerical stress-strain analysis by the FDM code FLAC 5.0. This experimental approach aimed at a quantitative analysis of the gravity-induced deformations by considering the influence of both creep processes and ground-water flow. The analysis pointed out the existence of three zones characterized by significant deformations within the ridge, well correlated to contractant and tensile shear zones. Moreover, two different deformation processes were pointed out from the modeling: the first one, on a large space-time scale, is due to creep deformations and have development in the order of a thousand years; the second one, acting on a smaller space-time scale, is due to elastic-plastic deformations and have development in the order of a hundred years