Detergent-soluble membrane vesicles are actively released by human pancreas (ColoÀ/Colo+) and colon (CXÀ/CX+) carcinoma sublines, differing in their capacity to present heat shock protein 70 (Hsp70)/Bag-4 on their plasma membranes. Floating properties, acetylcholine esterase activity, and protein composition characterized them as exosomes. An enrichment of Rab-4 documented their intracellular transport route from early endosomes to the plasma membrane. After solubilization, comparable amounts of cytosolic proteins, including tubulin, Hsp70, Hsc70, and Bag-4, but not ERresiding Grp94 and calnexin, were detectable in tumorderived exosomes. However, with respect to the exosomal surface, only Colo+/CX+ but not ColoÀ/CXÀ derived exosomes were Hsp70 membrane positive. Therefore, concomitant with an up-regulated cell surface density of activation markers, migration and Hsp70 reactivity of natural killer (NK) cells was stimulated selectively by Hsp70/Bag-4 surface-positive exosomes, but not by their negative counterparts and tumor cell lysates. Moreover, the exosome-mediated lytic activity of NK cells was blockable by Hsp70-specific antibody. As already shown for TKD stimulation, NK cells preincubated with Hsp70 surface-positive exosomes initiated apoptosis in tumors through granzyme B release. In summary, our data provide an explanation how Hsp70 reactivity in NK cells is induced by tumor-derived exosomes. (Cancer Res 2005; 65(12): 5238-47)
Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a genetically heterogeneous recessive disorder characterized by defective cilia and flagella motility. Chronic destructive-airway disease is caused by abnormal respiratory-tract mucociliary clearance. Abnormal propulsion of sperm flagella contributes to male infertility. Genetic defects in most individuals affected by PCD cause randomization of left-right body asymmetry; approximately half show situs inversus or situs ambiguous. Almost 70 years after the hy3 mouse possessing Hydin mutations was described as a recessive hydrocephalus model, we report HYDIN mutations in PCD-affected persons without hydrocephalus. By homozygosity mapping, we identified a PCD-associated locus, chromosomal region 16q21-q23, which contains HYDIN. However, a nearly identical 360 kb paralogous segment (HYDIN2) in chromosomal region 1q21.1 complicated mutational analysis. In three affected German siblings linked to HYDIN, we identified homozygous c.3985G>T mutations that affect an evolutionary conserved splice acceptor site and that subsequently cause aberrantly spliced transcripts predicting premature protein termination in respiratory cells. Parallel whole-exome sequencing identified a homozygous nonsense HYDIN mutation, c.922A>T (p.Lys307(∗)), in six individuals from three Faroe Island PCD-affected families that all carried an 8.8 Mb shared haplotype across HYDIN, indicating an ancestral founder mutation in this isolated population. We demonstrate by electron microscopy tomography that, consistent with the effects of loss-of-function mutations, HYDIN mutant respiratory cilia lack the C2b projection of the central pair (CP) apparatus; similar findings were reported in Hydin-deficient Chlamydomonas and mice. High-speed videomicroscopy demonstrated markedly reduced beating amplitudes of respiratory cilia and stiff sperm flagella. Like the hy3 mouse model, all nine PCD-affected persons had normal body composition because nodal cilia function is apparently not dependent on the function of the CP apparatus.
The development of vessel-like structures in vitro to mimic as well as to realize the possibility of tissue-engineered small vascular networks presents a major challenge to cell biologists and biotechnologists. We aimed to establish a three-dimensional (3-D) culture system with an endothelial network that does not require artificial substrates or ECM compounds. By using human skin fibroblasts and endothelial cells (ECs) from the human umbilical vein (HUVECs) in diverse spheroid coculture strategies, we verified that fibroblast support and modulate EC migration, viability, and network formation in a 3-D tissue-like stromal environment. In mixed spheroid cultures consisting of human ECs and fibroblasts, a complex 3-D network with EC tubular structures, lumen formation, pinocytotic activity, and tight junction complexes has been identified on the basis of immunohistochemical and transmission electron microscopic imaging. Tubular networks with extensions up to 400 m were achieved. When EC suspensions were used, EC migration and network formation were critically affected by the status of the fibroblast. However, the absence of EC migration into the center of 14-day, but not 3-day, precultured fibroblast spheroids could not be attributed to loss of F viability. In parallel, it was also confirmed that migrated ECs that entered cluster-like formations became apoptotic, whereas the majority of those forming vessel-like structures remained viable for Ͼ8 days. Our protocols allow us to study the nature of tubule formation in a manner more closely related to the in vivo situation as well as to understand the basis for the integration of capillary networks in tissue grafts and develop methods of quantifying the amount of angiogenesis in spheroids using fibroblast and other cells isolated from the same patient, along with ECs. endothelium; angiogenesis; human umbilical vein endothelial cell; multicellular spheroid; coculture; tubular structures ANGIOGENESIS IS A COMPLEX morphogenetic process initiated primarily by sprouting of endothelial capillaries from existing blood vessels to form an endothelial plexus. After being remodeled, the vasculature matures by recruitment of perivascular cells and smooth muscle cells. Vascular maturation attenuates the rate of vascular sprouting and prevents vascular collapse and regression (18,24), which is partly reflected by contact inhibition of endothelial cell (EC) proliferation in coculture systems with pericytes or smooth muscle cells (7,12,29,47). In adults, the angiogenic process is essential during wound healing, tissue repair, and remodeling and for female reproductive cycles, among many normal and pathological conditions. Mechanistic studies designed to gain a better understanding of, and an ability to manipulate, the angiogenic process in health and disease have intensified during the past 30 years, having been stimulated by Folkman's (2,16,19,25,27) initial hypotheses regarding the angiogenic switch during tumor cell growth and the development of the concept of antiangiogenic ther...
Background: In renal Fanconi's syndrome, dysfunction in proximal tubular cells leads to renal losses of water, electrolytes, and low-molecular-weight nutrients. For most types of isolated Fanconi's syndrome, the genetic cause and underlying defect remain unknown. Methods: We clinically and genetically characterized members of a five-generation black family with isolated autosomal dominant Fanconi's syndrome. We performed genomewide linkage analysis, gene sequencing, biochemical and cell-biologic investigations of renal proximal tubular cells, studies in knockout mice, and functional evaluations of mitochondria. Urine was studied with the use of proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H-NMR) spectroscopy. Results: We linked the phenotype of this family's Fanconi's syndrome to a single locus on chromosome 3q27, where a heterozygous missense mutation in EHHADH segregated with the disease. The p.E3K mutation created a new mitochondrial targeting motif in the N-terminal portion of EHHADH, an enzyme that is involved in peroxisomal oxidation of fatty acids and is expressed in the proximal tubule. Immunocytofluorescence studies showed mistargeting of the mutant EHHADH to mitochondria. Studies of proximal tubular cells revealed impaired mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation and defects in the transport of fluids and a glucose analogue across the epithelium. 1H-NMR spectroscopy showed elevated levels of mitochondrial metabolites in urine from affected family members. Ehhadh knockout mice showed no abnormalities in renal tubular cells, a finding that indicates a dominant negative nature of the mutation rather than haploinsufficiency. Conclusions: Mistargeting of peroxisomal EHHADH disrupts mitochondrial metabolism and leads to renal Fanconi's syndrome; this indicates a central role of mitochondria in proximal tubular function. The dominant negative effect of the mistargeted protein adds to the spectrum of monogenic mechanisms of Fanconi's syndrome. (Funded by the European Commission Seventh Framework Programme and others.)
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