ROLE OF ATYPICAL CHEMOKINE RECEPTOR 2 IN PERIVASCULAR ADIPOSE TISSUE INFLAMMATION IN ANGIOTENSIN II DEPENDENT HYPERTENSION
Mikolajczyk, T;Skiba, D;Vidler, F;Love, S;Justo-Junior, A;Nosalski, R;Graham, D;Maffia, P;Graham, G;Guzik, T;
| DOI: 10.1097/01.hjh.0000744876.53171.8b
Chronic infusion of Ang II caused increased of leukocyte (CD45+) content in PVAT in both WT and ACKR2-/- mice. This increase was particularly evident for T cell subsets in WT but not in ACKR2-/-. However the number of macrophages (F4/80+CD11b+) was increased in both groups. Interestingly, ACKR2-/- revealed decreased T cell number infiltrating PVAT upon Ang II infusion in comparison to WT. Hypertension was associated with increased CCR1, CCR2 and CCR3 expression in PVAT in both WT and ACKR2-/-. However, ACKR2-/- revealed higher expression of CCR1 and CCR2 but not CCR3 in comparison to WT. Interestingly, increased expression of CCR5 in PVAT upon Ang II infusion in WT was not observed in ACKR2-/-. Hypertension resulted in increased RANTES level in aorta and PVAT to the same extent in both WT and ACKR2-/-. However, MCP-1, MIP-1 alpha and MIP-1 beta level was higher in ACKR2-/- aorta than in WT aorta upon Ang II infusion. ACKR2 expression was lower in PVAT than in aorta. Interestingly, Ang II administration decreased the expression of ACKR2 in aorta but increased ACKR2 level in thoracic PVAT. RNAscope analysis revealed ACKR2 expression in vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC). Vessels isolated from ACKR2-/- were protected from vascular dysfunction and revealed reduced ROS production in comparison to WT upon Ang II administration. ACKR2-/- mice developed similar extent of blood pressure increase as WT in hypertension.
RNA in situ hybridization and expression of related genes regulating the accumulation of triterpenoids in Cyclocarya paliurus
Chen, X;Chen, B;Shang, X;Fang, S;
PMID: 33960380 | DOI: 10.1093/treephys/tpab067
Cyclocarya paliurus, a woody medicinal species in the Juglandaceae, grows extensively in subtropical areas of China. Triterpenoids in the leaves have health-promoting effects, including hypoglycemic and hypolipidemic activities. To understand triterpenoid biosynthesis, transport, and accumulation in C. paliurus during the growing season, gene cloning, gene expression, and RNA in situ hybridization of related genes were used, and accumulation was examined in various organs. The complete CDSs of three genes, CpHMGR, CpDXR, and CpSQS, were obtained from GenBank and RACE. RNA in situ hybridization signals of the three genes mainly occurred in the epidermis, palisade tissue, phloem, and xylem of leaf, shoot, and root, with the signals generally consistent with the accumulation of metabolites in tissues, except in the xylem. Both gene expression and triterpenoid accumulations showed seasonal variations in all organs. However, total triterpenoid content in the leaves was significantly higher than that in the shoots, with the maximum in shoots in August and in leaves in October. According to Pearson correlation analysis, triterpenoid accumulation in the leaves was significantly positively related with the relative expression of CpSQS. However, the relation between gene expression and accumulation was dependent on the role of the gene in the pathway, as well as on the plant organ. The results suggested that most of the intermediates catalyzed by CpHMGR and CpDXR in young shoots and roots were used in growth and flowering in the spring, whereas subsequent triterpenoid biosynthesis in the downstream catalyzed by CpSQS mainly occurred in the leaves by using transferred and in situ intermediates as substrates. Thus, this study provides a reference to improve triterpenoid accumulation in future C. paliurus plantations.
Hayashi, S;Sato, T;Ono, H;Ito, S;Takai, R;Shibuya, K;Sasakawa, C;
PMID: 37087879 | DOI: 10.1016/j.vetmic.2023.109740
Porcine circovirus type 3 (PCV3) is a novel porcine circovirus that has been detected in pigs showing various clinical and pathological conditions, as well as in many asymptomatic pigs. The pathogenesis of PCV3 infection in pigs remains unclear. To evaluate the in vivo growth and pathogenicity of PCV3, we performed two experiments on PCV3 infection in laboratory-grade miniature pigs with strictly controlled genetic backgrounds and microbiological status. A PCV3 passage experiment confirmed PCV3 genome detection in the sera and multiple organs via in vivo serial passage generations. PCV3 was successively passaged in miniature pigs by inoculating tissue homogenates from infected pigs supporting Koch's principles. In the PCV3 infection experiment, viremia was observed in all the inoculated pigs, and transient neurological signs were observed in one of the three pigs. Histopathologically, all three pigs in the PCV3 inoculation group exhibited lung disorders such as interstitial pneumonia and lymphoplasmacytic perivasculitis. In addition, one pig with neurological signs in the PCV3 inoculation group showed focal thrombosis in the meninges of the cerebellum. Vascular lesions in both the lungs and brain suggest that PCV3 may cause injury to vascular tissues. In situ hybridization (ISH)-RNA analysis demonstrated that the PCV3 genome was localized in the lymph nodes of pigs inoculated with PCV3. The PCV3 in vivo passage system in NIBS miniature pigs will help investigate the pathogenicity of PCV3.
Shi Z, Cassaglia PA, Pelletier NE, Brooks VL.
PMID: PMID: 30628058 | DOI: DOI:10.1113/JP277517
KEY POINTS: ICV insulin increased SNA and baroreflex control of SNA and HR dramatically more in obese male rats; in obese females, the responses were abolished. In obese males, the enhanced LSNA responses were associated with reduced tonic inhibition of LSNA by NPY in the PVN. Yet, PVN NPY injection decreased LSNA similarly in OP/OR/CON rats. Collectively, these results suggest that NPY inputs were decreased. In obese females, NPY inhibition in the PVN was maintained. Moreover, NPY neurons in the ArcN became resistant to the inhibitory effects of insulin. A HFD did not alter arcuate NPY neuronal InsR expression in males or females. Obesity-induced "selective sensitization" of the brain to the sympathoexcitatory effects of insulin and leptin may contribute to elevated basal SNA, and therefore hypertension development, in males with obesity. These data may explain in part why obesity increases SNA less in women compared to men. ABSTRACT: Obesity increases sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) in men, but not women; however, the mechanisms are unknown. We tested if intracerebroventricular insulin infusion increases SNA more in obese male than female rats and if sex differences are mediated by changes in tonic inhibition of SNA by Neuropeptide Y (NPY) in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN). When consuming a high fat diet, obesity prone (OP) rats accrued excess fat, whereas obesity resistant (OR) rats maintained adiposity as in rats eating a control (CON) diet. Insulin increased lumbar SNA (LSNA) similarly in CON/OR males and females under urethane-anesthesia. The LSNA response was magnified in OP males, but abolished in OP females. In males, blockade of PVN NPY Y1 receptors with BIBO3304 increased LSNA in CON/OR rats, but not OP rats. Yet, PVN nanoinjections of NPY decreased LSNA similarly between groups. Thus, tonic PVN NPY inhibition of LSNA may be lost in obese males, due to a decrease in NPY inputs. In contrast, in females, PVN BIBO3304 increased LSNA similarly in OP, OR and CON rats. After insulin, PVN BIBO3304 failed to increase LSNA in CON/OR females, but increased LSNA in OP females, suggesting that with obesity NPY neurons become resistant to the inhibitory effects of insulin. These sex differences were not associated with changes in arcuate NPY neuronal insulin receptor expression. Collectively, these data reveal a marked sex difference in the impact of obesity on insulin's sympathoexcitatory actions and implicate sexually dimorphic changes in NPY inhibition of SNA in the PVN as one mechanism.
In Vitro Silencing of lncRNA Expression Using siRNAs
Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.)
Thijssen, MS;Bintz, J;Arnes, L;
PMID: 34160804 | DOI: 10.1007/978-1-0716-1581-2_9
Recent advances in sequencing technologies have uncovered the existence of thousands of long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) with dysregulated expression in cancer. As a result, there is burgeoning interest in understanding their function and biological significance in both homeostasis and disease. RNA interference (RNAi) enables sequence-specific gene silencing and can, in principle, be employed to silence virtually any gene. However, when applied to lncRNAs, it is important to consider current limitations in their annotation and current principles regarding lncRNA regulation and function when assessing their phenotype in cancer cell lines. In this chapter we describe the analysis of lncRNA splicing variant expression, including subcellular localization, transfection of siRNAs in cancer cell lines, and validation of gene silencing by quantitative PCR and single molecule in situ hybridization. All protocols can be performed in a laboratory with essential equipment for cell culture, molecular biology, and imaging.
Virchows Archiv : an international journal of pathology
Adachi, K;Sakurai, Y;Ichinoe, M;Tadehara, M;Tamaki, A;Kesen, Y;Kato, T;Mii, S;Enomoto, A;Takahashi, M;Koizumi, W;Murakumo, Y;
PMID: 34762199 | DOI: 10.1007/s00428-021-03230-2
CD109 is a glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored glycoprotein, whose expression is upregulated in some types of malignant tumors. High levels of CD109 in tumor cells have been reported to correlate with poor prognosis; however, significance of CD109 stromal expression in human malignancy has not been elucidated. In this study, we investigated the tumorigenic properties of CD109 in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). Immunohistochemical analysis of 92 PDAC surgical specimens revealed that positive CD109 expression in tumor cells was significantly associated with poor prognosis (disease-free survival, p = 0.003; overall survival, p = 0.002), and was an independent prognostic factor (disease-free survival, p = 0.0173; overall survival, p = 0.0104) in PDAC. Furthermore, CD109 expression was detected in the stroma surrounding tumor cells, similar to that of α-smooth muscle actin, a histological marker of cancer-associated fibroblasts. The stromal CD109 expression significantly correlated with tumor progression in PDAC (TNM stage, p = 0.033; N factor, p = 0.024; lymphatic invasion, p = 0.028). In addition, combined assessment of CD109 in tumor cells and stroma could identify the better prognosis group of patients from the entire patient population. In MIA PaCa-2 PDAC cell line, we demonstrated the involvement of CD109 in tumor cell motility, but not in PANC-1. Taken together, CD109 not only in the tumor cells but also in the stroma is involved in the progression and prognosis of PDAC, and may serve as a useful prognostic marker in PDAC.
Expression analysis of neuropeptide FF receptors on neuroendocrine-related neurons in the rat brain using highly sensitive in situ hybridization
Histochemistry and cell biology
Higo, S;Kanaya, M;Ozawa, H;
PMID: 33398437 | DOI: 10.1007/s00418-020-01956-9
RF-amide peptides, a family of peptides characterized by a common carboxy-terminal Arg-Phe-NH2 motif, play various physiological roles in the brain including the modulation of neuroendocrine signaling. Neuropeptide FF (NPFF) receptors exhibit a high affinity for all RF-amide peptides, which suggests that the neurons expressing these NPFF receptors may have multiple functions in the brain. However, the distribution of the neurons expressing NPFF receptors in the rat brain remains poorly understood. This study aimed to determine the detailed histological distribution of mRNA that encodes the neuropeptide FF receptors (Npffr1 and Npffr2) in the rat brain using in situ hybridization. Neurons with strong Npffr1 expression were observed in the lateral septal nucleus and several hypothalamic areas related to neuroendocrine functions, including the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) and arcuate nucleus, whereas Npffr2-expressing neurons were observed mainly in brain regions involved in somatosensory pathways, such as several subnuclei of the thalamus. Npffr1 expression was observed in 70% of corticotropin-releasing hormone neurons, but in only a small population of oxytocin and vasopressin neurons in the PVN. Npffr1 expression was also observed in the dopaminergic neurons in the periventricular nucleus and the dorsal arcuate nucleus, and in the kisspeptin neurons in the anteroventral periventricular nucleus. These results suggest that NPFFR1-mediated signaling may be involved in neuroendocrine functions, such as in reproduction and stress response. In conjunction with a detailed histological map of NPFFRs, this study provides useful data for future neuroendocrine research.
Zhang N, Zhang HY, Bi SA, Moran TH and Bi S
PMID: 30902570 | DOI: 10.1016/j.neulet.2019.03.030
Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) plays an important role in the regulation of energy balance. While the regulation of TRH in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) in response to changes of energy balance has been well studied, how TRH is regulated in the dorsomedial hypothalamus (DMH) in maintaining energy homeostasis remains unclear. Here, we assessed the effects of food restriction and exercise on hypothalamic Trh expression using Otsuka Long-Evens Tokushima Fatty (OLETF) rats. Sedentary ad lib fed OLETF rats (OLETF-SED) became hyperphagic and obese. These alterations were prevented in OLETF rats with running wheel access (OLETF-RW) or food restriction in which their food was pair-fed (OLETF-PF) to the intake of lean control rats (LETO-SED). Evaluation of hypothalamic gene expression revealed that Trh mRNA expression was increased in the PVN of OLETF-SED rats and normalized in OLETF-RW and OLETF-PF rats compared to LETO-SED rats. In contrast, the expression of Trh in the DMH was decreased in OLETF-SED rats relative to LETO-SED rats. This alteration was reversed in OLETF-RW rats as seen in LETO-SED rats, but food restriction resulted in a significant increase in DMH Trh expression in OLETF-PF rats compared to LETO-SED rats. Strikingly, while Trh mRNA expression was decreased in the PVN of intact rats in response to acute food deprivation, food deprivation resulted in increased expression of Trh in the DMH. Together, these results demonstrate the differential regulation of Trh expression in the PVN and DMH in OLETF rats and suggest that DMH TRH also contributes to hypothalamic regulation of energy balance.
Synergistic roles of Wnt modulators R-spondin2 and R-spondin3 in craniofacial morphogenesis and dental development
Alhazmi, N;Carroll, SH;Kawasaki, K;Woronowicz, KC;Hallett, SA;Macias Trevino, C;Li, EB;Baron, R;Gori, F;Yelick, PC;Harris, MP;Liao, EC;
PMID: 33712657 | DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-85415-y
Wnt signaling plays a critical role in craniofacial patterning, as well as tooth and bone development. Rspo2 and Rspo3 are key regulators of Wnt signaling. However, their coordinated function and relative requirement in craniofacial development and odontogensis are poorly understood. We showed that in zebrafish rspo2 and rspo3 are both expressed in osteoprogenitors in the embryonic craniofacial skeleton. This is in contrast to mouse development, where Rspo3 is expressed in osteoprogenitors while Rspo2 expression is not observed. In zebrafish, rspo2 and rspo3 are broadly expressed in the pulp, odontoblasts and epithelial crypts. However, in the developing molars of the mouse, Rspo3 is largely expressed in the dental follicle and alveolar mesenchyme while Rspo2 expression is restricted to the tooth germ. While Rspo3 ablation in the mouse is embryonic lethal, zebrafish rspo3-/- mutants are viable with modest decrease in Meckel's cartilage rostral length. However, compound disruption of rspo3 and rspo2 revealed synergistic roles of these genes in cartilage morphogenesis, fin development, and pharyngeal tooth development. Adult rspo3-/- zebrafish mutants exhibit a dysmorphic cranial skeleton and decreased average tooth number. This study highlights the differential functions of Rspo2 and Rspo3 in dentocranial morphogenesis in zebrafish and in mouse.
AgRP signalling negatively regulates bone mass
Journal of neuroendocrinology
Enriquez, RF;Lee, NJ;Herzog, H;
PMID: 33913541 | DOI: 10.1111/jne.12978
The central nervous system is an active and major regulator of bone structure and remodelling. Specifically, signalling within the hypothalamus has been shown to be critical to ensuring that skeletal functions align with whole body metabolic supply and demand. Here, we identify agouti-related peptide (AgRP), an orexigenic peptide exclusively co-expressed with neuropeptide Y (NPY) in the arcuate nucleus (ARC) of the hypothalamus, as another critical player in the central control of bone homeostasis. Using novel mouse models, we show that AgRP deletion leads to an increase in cortical and trabecular bone mass as a result of an increase in bone thickness despite a lean phenotype, particularly in male mice. Interestingly, male AgRP deficient mice display a significant decrease in pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) expression in the ARC, but no change in NPY or CART expression, suggesting that the increase in bone mass in AgRP-deficient mice is unlikely to be a result of altered NPY signalling. This is consistent with the observation that bone mass is unchanged in response to the specific deletion of NPY from AgRP expressing neurones. By contrast, POMC expression in the ARC is significantly increased in female AgRP deficient mice, although AgRP deletion results in altered respiratory exchange ratio regulation in response to re-feeding after a fast in both sexes. Taken together, the present study identifies AgRP as being directly involved in the regulation of bone mass and highlights the complexity intrinsic to the neuropeptide regulation of the skeleton.
Renal AAV2-Mediated Overexpression of Long Non-Coding RNA H19 Attenuates Ischemic Acute Kidney Injury Through Sponging of microRNA-30a-5p
Journal of the American Society of Nephrology : JASN
Haddad, G;Kölling, M;Wegmann, UA;Dettling, A;Seeger, H;Schmitt, R;Soerensen-Zender, I;Haller, H;Kistler, AD;Dueck, A;Engelhardt, S;Thum, T;Mueller, TF;Wüthrich, RP;Lorenzen, JM;
PMID: 33478972 | DOI: 10.1681/ASN.2020060775
Renal ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury is a major cause of AKI. Noncoding RNAs are intricately involved in the pathophysiology of this form of AKI. Transcription of hypoxia-induced, long noncoding RNA H19, which shows high embryonic expression and is silenced in adults, is upregulated in renal I/R injury. Lentivirus-mediated overexpression, as well as antisense oligonucleotide-based silencing, modulated H19 in vitro. In vivo analyses used constitutive H19 knockout mice. In addition, renal vein injection of adeno-associated virus 2 (AAV2) carrying H19 caused overexpression in the kidney. Expression of H19 in kidney transplant patients with I/R injury was investigated. H19 is upregulated in kidney biopsies of patients with AKI, in murine ischemic kidney tissue, and in cultured and ex vivo sorted hypoxic endothelial cells (ECs) and tubular epithelial cells (TECs). Transcription factors hypoxia-inducible factor 1-α, LHX8, and SPI1 activate H19 in ECs and TECs. H19 overexpression promotes angiogenesis in vitro and in vivo. In vivo, transient AAV2-mediated H19 overexpression significantly improved kidney function, reduced apoptosis, and reduced inflammation, as well as preserving capillary density and tubular epithelial integrity. Sponging of miR-30a-5p mediated the effects, which, in turn, led to target regulation of Dll4, ATG5, and Snai1. H19 overexpression confers protection against renal injury by stimulating proangiogenic signaling. H19 overexpression may be a promising future therapeutic option in the treatment of patients with ischemic AKI.
Luo, Y;Bao, H;Crowther, A;Asrican, B;Li, Y;Tart, D;Deng, F;Wan, J;Zhang, L;Patel, A;Li, Y;Song, J;
| DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.4017894
The serotonin (5HT) system mediates pathophysiology of stress responses and influences adult hippocampal neurogenesis from radial neural stem cells (rNSCs) in a sex-dependent manner. However, the mechanisms underlying sex differences in serotonergic regulation and stress vulnerability of rNSCs remain elusive. Here we report sex-dependent expression of 5HT1ARs in rNSCs of adult mouse hippocampus, with higher levels of 5HT1AR expression in rNSCs of females. Functionally, selective deletion of 5HT1ARs decreases rNSC production through decreased symmetric self-renewal in females. Mechanistically, 5HT1AR deletion in females results in 5HT-induced depolarization in rNSCs mediated by 5HT7R upregulation. Interestingly, stress exerts sex-dependent effects on 5HT release in the neurogenic niche and interacts with 5HT1ARs to regulate rNSC production in females through 5HT7R-mediated calcium signaling. These findings reveal a sex-dependent role of 5HT1ARs in regulating expansion and stress vulnerability of adult hippocampal rNSCs.