• Title/Summary/Keyword: GFP expression

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Knockdown of Archvillin by siRNA Inhibits Myofibril Assembly in Cultured Skeletal Myoblast

  • Lee, Yeong-Mi;Kim, Hyun-Suk;Choi, Jun-Hyuk;Choi, Jae-Kyoung;Joo, Young-Mi;Ahn, Seung-Ju;Min, Byung-In;Kim, Chong-Rak
    • Biomedical Science Letters
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    • v.13 no.4
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    • pp.251-261
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    • 2007
  • A myofiber of skeletal muscle is composed of myofibrils, sarcolemma (plasma membrane), and constameres, which anchor the myofibrils to the sarcolemma. Achvillin is a recently identified F-actin binding muscle protein, co-isolates with dystrophin and caveolin-3 in low-density sarcolemma of striated muscle, and colocalizes with dystrophin at costameres, the specialized adhesion sites in muscle. Archvillin also binds to nebulin and localizes at myofibrillar Z-discs, the lateral boundaries of the sarcomere in muscle. However other roles of archvillin on the dynamics of myofibrillogenesis remain to be defined. The goal of this study is, by using siRNA-mediated gene silencing technique, to investigate the effect of archvillin on the dynamics of myofibrillogenesis in cell culture of a mouse skeletal myogenic cell line (C2C12), where presumptive myoblasts withdraw from the cell cycle, fuse, undergo de novo myofibrillogenesis, and differentiate into mature myotubes. The roles of archvillin in the assembly and maintenance of myofibril and during the progression of myofibrillogenesis induced in skeletal myoblast following gene silencing in the cell culture were investigated. Fluorescence microscopy demonstrated that the distribution of archvillin was changed along the course of myofibril assembly with nebulin, vinculin and F-actin and then located at Z-lines with nebulin. Fluorescence microscopy demonstrated that knockdown of mouse archvillin expression led to an impaired assembly of new myofibrillar clusters and delayed fusion and myofibrillogenesis although the mouse archvillin siRNA did not affect those expressions of archvillin binding proteins, such as nebulin and F-actin. This result is corresponded with that of RT-PCR and western blots. When the perturbed archvillin was rescued by co-transfection with GFP or Red tagged human archvillin construct, the inhibited cell fusion and myotube formation was recovered. By using siRNA technique, archvillin was found to be involved in early stage of myofibrillogenesis. Therefore, the current data suggest the idea that archvillin plays critical roles on cell fusion and dynamic myofibril assembly.

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Neuronal Protection by Rooibos (Aspalathus linearis) Tea Infusions in a Hypoxic Model of Cultured Rat Cortical Neurons (흰쥐 대뇌세포배양의 저산소증모델에서 루이보스차 침제에 의한 신경세포 보호작용)

  • Moon, Il-Soo;Ko, Bok-Hyun
    • Journal of Life Science
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    • v.14 no.2
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    • pp.291-295
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    • 2004
  • Rooibos (Aspalathus linearis) (RB) is a leguminous shrub native to the mountainous areas of the northwestern Cape Province in South Africa. RB tea infusions are the fermentation products of its leaves and fine sterns, and known to have a high antioxidative activity due to the presence of flavonoids and phenolic acids. We investigated the effects of RB tea on the alleviation of oxidative stress on cultured rat cortical neurons in a hypoxic model. Measurement of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) released into culture media revealed that RB increased cell viabilities in both normoxia (6-18%) and hypoxia (2-24%) dose-dependently (10-100 $\mu\textrm{g}$/ml) on 16 days in vitro (3 days after treatment). Visualization of cell morphology by expression of GFP-Hsc70 fusion protein showed that RB (50 $\mu\textrm{g}$/ml) reduced the average vacuolated soma from 55.4$\pm$4.59% (no RB addition) to 40.9$\pm$6.3% (RB addition) on 5 days after hypoxia. Our results proves efficacy of RB in the neuroprotection of hypoxic neurons and extend application for RB into the prevention and/or treatment of neuronal damages.

The Effect of Autophagy to Cell Death in Nutrient-Deprived H460 Cells (영양분이 결핍된 H460 세포주에서 자가포식이 세포사멸에 미치는 영향)

  • Jang, Hye-Yeon;Jo, Hyang-Jeong;Hwhang, Ki-Eun;Kim, So-Young;Lee, Kang-Kyoo;Moon, Sun-Rock;Shin, Jeong-Hyun;Cho, Kyung-Hwa;Lee, Mi-Kung;Lee, Sam-Youn;Park, Soon-Ah;Park, Jong-Kun;Kim, Hui-Jung;Yang, Sei-Hoon
    • Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases
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    • v.69 no.2
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    • pp.81-94
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    • 2010
  • Background: Autophagy is an important adaptive mechanism in normal development and in response to changing environmental stimuli in cancer. Previous papers have reported that different types of cancer underwent autophagy to obtain amino acids as energy source of dying cells in nutrient-deprived conditions. However, whether or not autophagy in the process of lung cancer causes death or survival is controversial. Therefore in this study, we investigated whether nutrient deprivation induces autophagy in human H460 lung cancer cells. Methods: H460, lung cancer cells were incubated in RPMI 1640 medium, and the starved media, which are BME and RPMI media without serum, including 2-deoxyl-D-glucose according to time dependence. To evaluate the viability and find out the mechanism of cell death under nutrient-deprived conditions, the MTT assay and flow cytometry were done and analyzed the apoptotic and autophagic related proteins. It is also measured the development of acidic vascular organelles by acridine orange. Results: The nutrient-deprived cancer cell is relatively sensitive to cell death rather than normal nutrition. Massive cytoplasmic vacuolization was seen under nutrient-deprived conditions. Autophagic vacuoles were visible at approximately 12 h and as time ran out, vacuoles became larger and denser with the increasing number of vacuoles. In addition, the proportion of acridine orange stain-positive cells increased according to time dependence. Localization of GFP-LC3 in cytoplasm and expression of LC-3II and Beclin 1 were increased according to time dependence on nutrient-deprived cells. Conclusion: Nutrient deprivation induces cell death through autophagy in H460 lung cancer cells.

Rice OsACDR1 (Oryza sativa Accelerated Cell Death and Resistance 1) Is a Potential Positive Regulator of Fungal Disease Resistance

  • Kim, Jung-A;Cho, Kyoungwon;Singh, Raksha;Jung, Young-Ho;Jeong, Seung-Hee;Kim, So-Hee;Lee, Jae-eun;Cho, Yoon-Seong;Agrawal, Ganesh K.;Rakwal, Randeep;Tamogami, Shigeru;Kersten, Birgit;Jeon, Jong-Seong;An, Gynheung;Jwa, Nam-Soo
    • Molecules and Cells
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    • v.28 no.5
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    • pp.431-439
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    • 2009
  • Rice Oryza sativa accelerated cell death and resistance 1 (OsACDR1) encodes a putative Raf-like mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase (MAPKKK). We had previously reported upregulation of the OsACDR1 transcript by a range of environmental stimuli involved in eliciting defense-related pathways. Here we apply biochemical, gain and loss-of-function approaches to characterize OsACDR1 function in rice. The OsACDR1 protein showed autophosphorylation and possessed kinase activity. Rice plants overexpressing OsACDR1 exhibited spontaneous hypersensitive response (HR)-like lesions on leaves, upregulation of defense-related marker genes and accumulation of phenolic compounds and secondary metabolites (phytoalexins). These transgenic plants also acquired enhanced resistance to a fungal pathogen (Magnaporthe grisea) and showed inhibition of appressorial penetration on the leaf surface. In contrast, loss-of-function and RNA silenced OsACDR1 rice mutant plants showed downregulation of defense-related marker genes expressions and susceptibility to M. grisea. Furthermore, transient expression of an OsACDR1:GFP fusion protein in rice protoplast and onion epidermal cells revealed its localization to the nucleus. These results indicate that OsACDR1 plays an important role in the positive regulation of disease resistance in rice.

Primary Culture of Chicken Tracheal Epithelial Cells and Study on Those Characters for Recombinant Virus Infection (닭 기도 상피세포의 1차 배양과 유전자 재조합 바이러스의 감염 특성 연구)

  • Park, Mi Na;Jang, Hyun-Jun;Keum, Dae Ho;Choi, Jin Ae;Yoo, Jae Gyu;Byun, Sung June;Park, Jong Ju;Ji, Ju Young;Lee, Kyung-Tai;Kim, Tae-Hun;Lee, Hyun-Jeong
    • Korean Journal of Poultry Science
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    • v.40 no.4
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    • pp.299-304
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    • 2013
  • Tracheal epithelial cells (TECs) are an important tool for studies of viral respiratory diseases. Primary TECs have been cultured from human, mouse and hamster. It is also necessary to diagnose viral respiratory disease and reveal infection mechanisms in chicken. In this study, we isolated tracheal epithelial layers from tracheal of 20-day-old chicks and cultured primary TECs from the isolated layers. Ciliated cells which were a typical morphology of TECs were observed in cultured primary TECs and maintained until cell passage 5 (15 to 20 days). When we analyzed expression patterns of epithelial marker genes (retinoic acid responder, FGF-binding protein, virus activating protease (VAP) in TECs compared to immortalized chicken embryonic fibroblast cell line (DF-1), all the marker genes are highly expressed in TECs than in DF-1. When TECs were cultured with 0.1 and 1 MOI of ND virus (rNDV-GFP strain) to test the susceptibility of TECs for ND virus, 12.6% and 48.2% of the incubated TECs were infected respectively. In addition, when DF-1 was incubated with 1 MOI of ND virus, the virus infection rate of DF-1 was three times lower than the virus infection rate of TECs. These data could contribute to study infection mechanisms of viral respiratory diseases and control them in chicken.