244 research outputs found

    Breve fra Rosendal Baronis Arkiv.

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    Chondrogenic differentiation of growth factor-stimulated precursor cells in cartilage repair tissue is associated with increased HIF-1Ξ± activity

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    SummaryObjectiveTo investigate the chondrogenic potential of growth factor-stimulated periosteal cells with respect to the activity of Hypoxia-inducible Factor 1Ξ± (HIF-1Ξ±).MethodsScaffold-bound autologous periosteal cells, which had been activated by Insulin-like Growth Factor 1 (IGF-1) or Bone Morphogenetic Protein 2 (BMP-2) gene transfer using both adeno-associated virus (AAV) and adenoviral (Ad) vectors, were applied to chondral lesions in the knee joints of miniature pigs. Six weeks after transplantation, the repair tissues were investigated for collagen type I and type II content as well as for HIF-1Ξ± expression. The functional role of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)/mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) and mitogen-activated protein kinase (MEK)/extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) signaling on BMP-2/IGF-1-induced HIF-1Ξ± expression was assessed in vitro by employing specific inhibitors.ResultsUnstimulated periosteal cells formed a fibrous extracellular matrix in the superficial zone and a fibrocartilaginous matrix in deep zones of the repair tissue. This zonal difference was reflected by the absence of HIF-1Ξ± staining in superficial areas, but moderate HIF-1Ξ± expression in deep zones. In contrast, Ad/AAVBMP-2-stimulated periosteal cells, and to a lesser degree Ad/AAVIGF-1-infected cells, adopted a chondrocyte-like phenotype with strong intracellular HIF-1Ξ± staining throughout all zones of the repair tissue and formed a hyaline-like matrix. In vitro, BMP-2 and IGF-1 supplementation increased HIF-1Ξ± protein levels in periosteal cells, which was based on posttranscriptional mechanisms rather than de novo mRNA synthesis, involving predominantly the MEK/ERK pathway.ConclusionThis pilot experimental study on a relatively small number of animals indicated that chondrogenesis by precursor cells is facilitated in deeper hypoxic zones of cartilage repair tissue and is stimulated by growth factors which enhance HIF-1Ξ± activity

    Renal tubular HIF-2Ξ± expression requires VHL inactivation and causes fibrosis and cysts.

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    The Hypoxia-inducible transcription Factor (HIF) represents an important adaptive mechanism under hypoxia, whereas sustained activation may also have deleterious effects. HIF activity is determined by the oxygen regulated Ξ±-subunits HIF-1Ξ± or HIF-2Ξ±. Both are regulated by oxygen dependent degradation, which is controlled by the tumor suppressor "von Hippel-Lindau" (VHL), the gatekeeper of renal tubular growth control. HIF appears to play a particular role for the kidney, where renal EPO production, organ preservation from ischemia-reperfusion injury and renal tumorigenesis are prominent examples. Whereas HIF-1Ξ± is inducible in physiological renal mouse, rat and human tubular epithelia, HIF-2Ξ± is never detected in these cells, in any species. In contrast, distinct early lesions of biallelic VHL inactivation in kidneys of the hereditary VHL syndrome show strong HIF-2Ξ± expression. Furthermore, knockout of VHL in the mouse tubular apparatus enables HIF-2Ξ± expression. Continuous transgenic expression of HIF-2Ξ± by the Ksp-Cadherin promotor leads to renal fibrosis and insufficiency, next to multiple renal cysts. In conclusion, VHL appears to specifically repress HIF-2Ξ± in renal epithelia. Unphysiological expression of HIF-2Ξ± in tubular epithelia has deleterious effects. Our data are compatible with dedifferentiation of renal epithelial cells by sustained HIF-2Ξ± expression. However, HIF-2Ξ± overexpression alone is insufficient to induce tumors. Thus, our data bear implications for renal tumorigenesis, epithelial differentiation and renal repair mechanisms

    Gene array of VHL mutation and hypoxia shows novel hypoxia-induced genes and that cyclin D1 is a VHL target gene

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    Gene expression analysis was performed on a human renal cancer cell line (786-0) with mutated VHL gene and a transfectant with wild-type VHL to analyse genes regulated by VHL and to compare with the gene programme regulated by hypoxia. There was a highly significant concordance of the global gene response to hypoxia and genes suppressed by VHL. Cyclin D1 was the most highly inducible transcript and 14-3-3 epsilon was downregulated. There were some genes regulated by VHL but not hypoxia in the renal cell line, suggesting a VHL role independent of hypoxia. However in nonrenal cell lines they were hypoxia regulated. These included several new pathways regulated by hypoxia, including RNase 6PL, collagen type 1 alpha 1, integrin alpha 5, ferritin light polypeptide, JM4 protein, transgelin and L1 cell adhesion molecule. These were not found in a recent SAGE analysis of the same cell line. Hypoxia induced downregulation of Cyclin D1 in nonrenal cells via an HIF independent pathway. The selective regulation of Cyclin D1 by hypoxia in renal cells may therefore contribute to the tissue selectivity of VHL mutation

    In vivo Identification and Specificity assessment of mRNA markers of hypoxia in human and mouse tumors

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Tumor hypoxia is linked to poor prognosis, but identification and quantification of tissue hypoxia remains a challenge. The hypoxia-specificity of HIF-1Ξ± target genes in vivo has been questioned due to the confounding influence of other microenvironmental abnormalities known to affect gene expression (e.g., low pH). Here we describe a new technique that by exploiting intratumoral oxygenation heterogeneity allows us to identify and objectively rank the most robust mRNA hypoxia biomarkers.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Mice carrying human (FaDu<sub>dd</sub>) or murine (SCCVII) tumors were injected with the PET hypoxia tracer FAZA. Four hours post-injection tumors were removed, frozen, and crushed into milligram-sized fragments, which were transferred individually to pre-weighed tubes containing RNAlater and then weighed. For each fragment radioactivity per tissue mass and expression patterns of selected mRNA biomarkers were analyzed and compared.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>In both tumour models, fragmentation into pieces weighing 10 to 60 mg resulted in tissue fragments with highly variable relative content of hypoxic cells as evidenced by an up to 13-fold variation in FAZA radioactivity per mass of tissue. Linear regression analysis comparing FAZA retention with patterns of gene expression in individual tissue fragments revealed that CA9, GLUT1 and LOX mRNA levels were equally and strongly correlated to hypoxic extent in FaDu<sub>dd</sub>. The same link between hypoxia and gene expression profile was observed for CA9 and GLUT1, but not LOX, in SCCVII tumors. Apparent in vivo hypoxia-specificity for other putative molecular markers of tissue hypoxia was considerably weaker.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The portrayed technique allows multiple pairwise measurements of mRNA transcript levels and extent of hypoxia in individual tumors at a smallest possible volumetric scale which (by limiting averaging effects inherent to whole-tumor analysis) strengthen the conclusiveness on true hypoxia-specificity of candidate genes while limiting the required number of tumors. Among tested genes, our study identified CA9, GLUT1 and possibly LOX as highly specific biomarkers of tumor hypoxia in vivo.</p

    Relation of hypoxia inducible factor 1Ξ± and 2Ξ± in operable non-small cell lung cancer to angiogenic/molecular profile of tumours and survival

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    Hypoxia inducible factors HIF1Ξ± and HIF2Ξ± are important proteins involved in the regulation of the transcription of a variety of genes related to erythropoiesis, glycolysis and angiogenesis. Hypoxic stimulation results in rapid increase of the HIF1Ξ± and 2Ξ± protein levels, as a consequence of a redox-sensitive stabilization. The HIFΞ±s enter the nucleus, heterodimerize with the HIF1Ξ² protein, and bind to DNA at the hypoxia response elements (HREs) of target genes. In this study we evaluated the immunohistochemical expression of these proteins in 108 tissue samples from non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and in normal lung tissues. Both proteins showed a mixed cytoplasmic/nuclear pattern of expression in cancer cells, tumoural vessels and tumour-infiltrating macrophages, as well as in areas of metaplasia, while normal lung components showed negative or very weak cytoplasmic staining. Positive HIF1Ξ± and HIF2Ξ± expression was noted in 68/108 (62%) and in 54/108 (50%) of cases respectively. Correlation analysis of HIF2Ξ± expression with HIF1Ξ± expression showed a significant association (P < 0.0001, r = 0.44). A strong association of the expression of both proteins with the angiogenic factors VEGF (P < 0.004), PD-ECGF (P < 0.003) and bFGF (P < 0.04) was noted. HIF1Ξ± correlated with the expression of bek-bFGF receptor expression (P = 0.01), while HIF2Ξ± was associated with intense VEGF/KDR-activated vascularization (P = 0.002). HIF2Ξ± protein was less frequently expressed in cases with a medium microvessel density (MVD); a high rate of expression was noted in cases with both low and high MVD (P = 0.006). Analysis of overall survival showed that HIF2Ξ± expression was related to poor outcome (P = 0.008), even in the group of patients with low MVD (P = 0.009). HIF1Ξ± expression was marginally associated with poor prognosis (P = 0.08). In multivariate analysis HIF2Ξ± expression was an independent prognostic indicator (P = 0.006, t-ratio 2.7). We conclude that HIF1Ξ± and HIF2Ξ± overexpression is a common event in NSCLC, which is related to the up-regulation of various angiogenic factors and with poor prognosis. Targeting the HIF pathway may prove of importance in the treatment of NSCLC. Β© 2001 Cancer Research Campaignhttp://www.bjcancer.co

    Mutations in mitochondrial DNA causing tubulointerstitial kidney disease

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    Tubulointerstitial kidney disease is an important cause of progressive renal failure whose aetiology is incompletely understood. We analysed a large pedigree with maternally inherited tubulointerstitial kidney disease and identified a homoplasmic substitution in the control region of the mitochondrial genome (m.547A>T). While mutations in mtDNA coding sequence are a well recognised cause of disease affecting multiple organs, mutations in the control region have never been shown to cause disease. Strikingly, our patients did not have classical features of mitochondrial disease. Patient fibroblasts showed reduced levels of mitochondrial tRNAPhe^{Phe}, tRNALeu1^{Leu1} and reduced mitochondrial protein translation and respiration. Mitochondrial transfer demonstrated mitochondrial transmission of the defect and in vitro assays showed reduced activity of the heavy strand promoter. We also identified further kindreds with the same phenotype carrying a homoplasmic mutation in mitochondrial tRNAPhe^{Phe} (m.616T>C). Thus mutations in mitochondrial DNA can cause maternally inherited renal disease, likely mediated through reduced function of mitochondrial tRNAPhe^{Phe}.This study was supported by a Wellcome Trust Senior Investigator Award to PHM [19710], by the National Institute for Health Research Cambridge and Imperial Biomedical Research Centres, and a Medical Research Council Clinical Training Fellowship awarded to TMC. The core facilities at CIMR were funded by a Wellcome Trust strategic award [100140]. PFC is a Wellcome Trust Senior Fellow in Clinical Science [101876/Z/13/Z] within the Medical Research Council Mitochondrial Biology Unit [MC_UP_1501/2]. CMG was supported by The Swedish Medical Research Council and The Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

    The effect of surgically induced ischaemia on gene expression in a colorectal cancer xenograft model

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    Delays in tissue fixation following tumour vascular clamping and extirpation may adversely affect subsequent protein and mRNA analysis. This study investigated the effect of surgically induced ischaemia in a xenograft model of a colorectal cancer on the expression of a range of prognostic, predictive, and hypoxic markers, with a particular emphasis on thymidylate synthase. Vascular occlusion of human tumour xenografts by D-shaped metal clamps permitted defined periods of tumour ischaemia. Alterations in protein expression were measured by immunohistochemistry and spectral imaging, and changes in mRNA were measured by reverse transcriptase–polymerase chain reaction. Thymidylate synthase expression decreased following vascular occlusion, and this correlated with cyclin A expression. A similar reduction in dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase was also seen. There were significant changes in the expression of several hypoxic markers, with carbonic anhydrase-9 showing the greatest response. Gene transcriptional levels were also noted to change following tumour clamping. In this xenograft model, surgically induced tumour ischaemia considerably altered the gene expression profiles of several prognostic and hypoxic markers, suggesting that the degree of tumour ischaemia should be minimised prior to tissue fixation

    Expression of delta-like ligand 4 (Dll4) and markers of hypoxia in colon cancer

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    BACKGROUND: Delta-like ligand 4 (Dll4) is a Notch ligand that is upregulated by hypoxia and vascular endothelial growth factor-A (VEGF-A) and is reported to have a role in tumor angiogenesis. Evidence from xenograft studies suggests that inhibiting Dll4-Notch signalling may overcome resistance to anti-VEGF therapy. The aim of this study was to characterise the expression of Dll4 in colon cancer and to assess whether it is associated with markers of hypoxia and prognosis. METHOD: In all, 177 colon cancers were represented in tissue microarrays. Immunohistochemistry was performed using validated antibodies against Dll4, VEGF, hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-1alpha, HIF-2alpha, prolyl hydroxylase (PHD)1, PHD2, PHD3 and carbonic anhydrase 9 (CA9). RESULTS: The expression of Dll4 was observed preferentially in the endothelium of 71% (125 out of 175) of colon cancers, but not in the endothelium adjacent to normal mucosa (none out of 107, P&lt;0.0001). The expression of VEGF was significantly associated with HIF-2alpha (P&lt;0.0001) and Dll4 (P=0.010). Only HIF-2alpha had a significant multivariate prognostic effect (hazard ratio 1.61, 95% confidence interval 1.01-2.57). Delta-like ligand 4 was also expressed by neoplastic cells, particularly neoplastic goblet cells. CONCLUSION: Endothelial expression of Dll4 is not a prognostic factor, but is significantly associated with VEGF. Assessing endothelial Dll4 expression may be critical in predicting response to anti-VEGF therapies
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