ARPE-19, a human retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cell line, has been widely used in studies of RPE function as well as gene expression. Here, we report the novel finding that N-(4-hydroxyphenyl)retinamide (fenretinide), a synthetic retinoic acid derivative and a potential chemopreventive agent against cancer, induced the differentiation of ARPE-19 cells into a neuronal phenotype. The treated cells lost their epithelial phenotype and exhibited a typical neuronal shape with long processes (four to five times longer than the cell body). The onset of fenretinide-induced neuronal differentiation was dose and time dependent, started within 1-2 days, and lasted at least 4 weeks. Immunohistochemical studies indicated that the expression of neurofilament proteins (NF160 and NF200), calretinin and neural cell adhesion molecule was increased in these differentiated cells. Western blot analysis indicated that cellular retinaldehyde-binding protein, which is normally expressed in RPE cells, was decreased in treated cells. Protein analysis on a two-dimensional gel followed by matrixassisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometric analysis demonstrated that heat-shock protein 70 was increased after fenretinide treatment. Thus, fenretinide, a synthetic retinoid, is able to induce neuronal differentiation of human RPE cells in culture.
To understand the molecular basis of viral diseases, transcriptome profiling has been widely used to correlate host gene expression change patterns with disease symptoms during viral infection in many plant hosts. We used infection of apple by Apple stem grooving virus (ASGV), which produces no disease symptoms, to assess the significance of host gene expression changes in disease development. We specifically asked the question of whether such asymptomatic infection is attributed to limited changes in host gene expression. Using RNA-seq, we identified a total of 184 up-regulated and 136 down-regulated genes in apple shoot cultures permanently infected by ASGV in comparison with virus-free shoot cultures. As in most plant hosts showing disease symptoms during viral infection, these differentially expressed genes encode known or putative proteins involved in cell cycle, cell wall biogenesis, response to biotic and abiotic stress, development and fruit ripening, phytohormone function, metabolism, signal transduction, transcription regulation, translation, transport, and photosynthesis. Thus, global host gene expression changes do not necessarily lead to virus disease symptoms. Our data suggest that the general approaches to correlate host gene expression changes under viral infection conditions to specific disease symptom, based on the interpretation of transcription profiling data and altered individual gene functions, may have limitations depending on particular experimental systems.
A practical and efficient method has been established for the direct oxidation of allylic C−H bonds catalyzed by visible-light-enabled photoredox agents. This protocol uses oxygen as the sole oxidant under metal-free conditions at room temperature and produces functionalized enones. When combined with acid-promoted dehydration, this benign and mild method enables the production of meta-functionalized phenols from simple cyclohexenols. A key to this reaction is the choice of tetrabutylammonium bromide as a hydrogen atom transfer cocatalyst.
NORPEG (RAI14), a developmentally regulated gene induced by retinoic acid, encodes a 980 amino acid (aa) residue protein containing six ankyrin repeats and a long coiled-coil domain [Kutty et al., J. Biol. Chem. 276 (2001), pp. 2831-2840]. We have expressed aa residues 1-287 of NORPEG and used the recombinant protein to produce an anti-NORPEG polyclonal antibody. Confocal immunofluorescence analysis showed that the subcellular localization of NORPEG in retinal pigment epithelial (ARPE-19) cells varies with cell density, with predominantly nuclear localization in nonconfluent cells, but a cytoplasmic localization, reminiscent of cytoskeleton, in confluent cultures. Interestingly, an evolutionarily conserved putative monopartite nuclear localization signal (P(270)KKRKAP(276)) was identified by analyzing the sequences of NORPEG and its orthologs. GFP-NORPEG (2-287 aa), a fusion protein containing this signal, was indeed localized to nuclei when expressed in ARPE-19 or COS-7 cells. Deletion and mutation analysis indicated that the identified nuclear localization sequence is indispensable for nuclear targeting.
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