1. In the present brief review, we describe some of the molecular and functional characteristics of a novel mammalian family of putative Ca2+-activated chloride channels (CLCA). 2. So far, two bovine (bCLC1; bCLCA2 (Lu-ECAM-1)), three mouse (mCLCA1; mCLCA2; mCLCA3) and four human (hCLCA1; hCLCA2; hCLCA3; hCLCA4) CLCA family members have been cloned. Each CLCA exhibits a distinct, often overlapping, tissue expression pattern. 3. With the exception of the truncated secreted hCLCA3, all CLCA proteins are synthesized as an approximately 125 kDa precursor transmembrane glycoprotein that is rapidly cleaved into 90 and 35 kDa subunits. 4. The CLCA proteins expressed on the luminal surface of lung vascular endothelia (bCLCA2; mCLCA1; hCLCA2) serve as adhesion molecules for lung metastatic cancer cells, mediating vascular arrest and lung colonization. 5. Expression of hCLCA2 in normal mammary epithelium is consistently lost in human breast cancer and in all tumorigenic breast cancer cell lines. Re-expression of hCLCA2 in human breast cancer cells abrogates invasiveness of Matrigel (BD Biosciences-Labware, Bedford, MA, USA) in vitro and tumorigenicity in nude mice, implying that hCLCA2 acts as a tumour suppressor in breast cancer.
Early trends of plant community development provide the basis of ecosystem function and reclamation success of oil sand extraction sites. However, few studies have explicitly investigated species-level interactions with different cover soil types, placement depths, and time since reclamation during early plant community development in boreal forests. We investigated effectiveness of forest floor mineral mix (FMM) and peat mineral mix (PMM) cover soils and placement depths (10 and 20 cm) at four research sites 4 to 13 years after reclamation. Outcomes of this study indicate FMM had a more positive influence on woody plant densities, vegetation cover, and species richness than PMM. Species assemblage, composition, dominance, and types (successional stages, habitat types, competitive-stress tolerant-ruderal strategies) also showed FMM cover soil performed better than PMM. Greater vegetation cover and richness on deeper (20 cm) cover soil placements were evident. However, this effect of cover soil depth would likely decrease with time. Dominant and subdominant species on FMM were native and early to late successional, thus trajectory community development on FMM followed typical early succession of boreal forests (from ruderal and annual to perennial communities), while PMM was dominated by non-native and annual forbs which could slow succession and ecosystem recovery.
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