Specialized neurons throughout the developing central nervous system secrete Reelin, which binds to ApoE receptor 2 (ApoER2) and very low density lipoprotein receptor (VLDLR), triggering a signal cascade that guides neurons to their correct position. Binding of Reelin to ApoER2 and VLDLR induces phosphorylation of Dab1, which binds to the intracellular domains of both receptors. Due to differential splicing, several isoforms of ApoER2 differing in their ligand-binding and intracellular domains exist. One isoform harbors four binding repeats plus an adjacent short 13 amino acid insertion containing a furin cleavage site. It is not known whether furin processing of this ApoER2 variant actually takes place and, if so, whether the produced fragment is secreted. Here we demonstrate that cleavage of this ApoER2 variant does indeed take place, and that the resulting receptor fragment consisting of the entire ligand-binding domain is secreted as soluble polypeptide. This receptor fragment inhibits Reelin signaling in primary neurons, indicating that it can act in a dominant-negative fashion in the regulation of Reelin signaling during embryonic brain development.
Transport, biological action, and clearance of leptin are subject to modulation by plasma components responsible for the formation of the so-called "bound" fraction of serum leptin. Candidates for modulators have been identified previously, but mechanisms for their action, and thus their physiological roles, have remained unclear. Here we have obtained evidence for a role of serum-borne clusterin in leptin biology and have delineated a possible mechanism for its action. We demonstrate complex formation between clusterin and leptin by several approaches and show that the binary complex retains the ability to transduce the leptin signal via binding to the leptin receptor and activation of the Janus kinase/signal transducer and activator of transcription pathway. The interaction of leptin with clusterin does not require additional serum components. Furthermore, and importantly for modulation of the bioactivity of leptin, uptake of leptin present in the complex can be mediated by members of the low density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor family, i.e., apolipoprotein receptor type-2 and the very LDL receptor, which here are shown to efficiently endocytose both free and leptin-associated clusterin. Thus, bioavailability of leptin at a given tissue site may be determined by the levels of clusterin and/or by the relative distribution of certain relatives of the LDL receptor vis-à-vis active leptin receptors.
Mycophenolic acid (MPA) is a selective inhibitor of inosine 5 0 -monophosphate dehydrogenase (IMPDH), the rate-limiting enzyme of de novo synthesis of guanine nucleotides. The isoenzyme IMPDH2 predominates in activated lymphocytes, and its inhibition by MPA is part of standard immunosuppressive regimens. Yet, there are significant unexplained differences in efficacy and tolerability among patients. The objective of this study was to analyze whether frequent variants in the IMPDH2 gene lead to changes in IMPDH activity and to differences in responsiveness to MPA therapy. All 14 exons and intron-exon boundary regions of IMPDH2 were sequenced from genomic DNA probes from 100 healthy individuals. Two novel exonic single-nucleotide polymorphisms were identified in 1% and one intronic polymorphism (rs11706052) in 19% of the study population. Lymphocyte IMPDH activity and proliferation under three MPA concentrations (2.5, 10 and 25 mmol l -1 ) were compared in rs11706052 carriers and wild-type individuals. The presence of rs11706052 polymorphism reduced the antiproliferative effect of MPA on lymphocytes by approximately 50% compared with the IMPDH2 wild-type form at therapeutic relevant concentrations of 10 mmol l -1 and 25 mmol l -1 . We conclude that a poorer response to MPA therapy can be explained in some individuals by the presence of the rs11706052 polymorphism.
In egg-laying species, such as the chicken, the mode of transport of lipoprotein particles from the capillary plasma to endocytic receptors on the oocyte surface is largely unknown. Here we show by molecular characterization that the large prominent heparan sulfate proteoglycan of extracellular matrices, termed perlecan or HSPG2 (the product of the hspg2 gene), is a component of ovarian follicles that may participate in this process. However, although normally a major HSPG of basement membranes or basal laminae, in chicken follicles, perlecan is absent from the membranous structure between the theca interna and granulosa cell layers, which to date has been considered a bona fide basement membrane. Rather, the protein is localized in the extracellular matrix of theca externa cells, which produce this HSPG. Furthermore, in chicken testes, perlecan is localized in the peritubular spaces but in less organized fashion than the classical basement membrane components, agrin and laminin. All five domains and structural hallmarks of chicken perlecan (4071 residues) have been conserved in its mammalian counterparts. We have produced the recombinant domain II (containing low density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor-like binding repeats) of chicken perlecan and demonstrate its capacity to bind LDL and very low density lipoprotein (VLDL), apolipoprotein B-containing lipoproteins ultimately destined for uptake into oocytes via members of the low density lipoprotein receptor family. Binding to perlecan heparan sulfate side chains may facilitate the interaction of lipoproteins with domain II. Based on the current results and on domain-domain interactions revealed by recent ultrastructural investigations of the LDL receptor, nidogen, and laminin (Rudenko, G
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