Kaede is a photoconvertible fluorescence protein that changes from green to red upon exposure to violet light. The photoconversion of intracellular Kaede has no effect on cellular function. Using transgenic mice expressing the Kaede protein, we demonstrated that movement of cells with the photoconverted Kaede protein could be monitored from lymphoid organs to other tissues as well as from skin to the draining lymph node. Analysis of the kinetics of cellular movement revealed that each subset of cells in the lymph node, such as CD4 ؉ T, CD8 ؉ T, B, and dendritic cells, has a distinct migration pattern in vivo. Thus, the Kaede transgenic mouse system would be an ideal tool to monitor precise cellular movement in vivo at different stages of immune response to pathogens as well as in autoimmune diseases.cell migration ͉ dendritic cells ͉ lymphocyte ͉ photoconvertible protein
These results suggest that mammalian aPKC functions upstream of PAR-1b in both the establishment and maintenance of epithelial cell polarity.
Abstract-We created knock-in mice in which a deletion of 3 base pairs coding for K210 in cardiac troponin (cTn)T found in familial dilated cardiomyopathy patients was introduced into endogenous genes. Membrane-permeabilized cardiac muscle fibers from mutant mice showed significantly lower Ca 2ϩ sensitivity in force generation than those from wild-type mice. Peak amplitude of Ca 2ϩ transient in cardiomyocytes was increased in mutant mice, and maximum isometric force produced by intact cardiac muscle fibers of mutant mice was not significantly different from that of wild-type mice, suggesting that Ca 2ϩ transient was augmented to compensate for decreased myofilament Ca 2ϩ sensitivity. Nevertheless, mutant mice developed marked cardiac enlargement, heart failure, and frequent sudden death recapitulating the phenotypes of dilated cardiomyopathy patients, indicating that global functional defect of the heart attributable to decreased myofilament Ca 2ϩ sensitivity could not be fully compensated by only increasing the intracellular Ca 2ϩ transient. We found that a positive inotropic agent, pimobendan, which directly increases myofilament Ca 2ϩ sensitivity, had profound effects of preventing cardiac enlargement, heart failure, and sudden death. These results verify the hypothesis that Ca 2ϩ desensitization of cardiac myofilament is the absolute cause of the pathogenesis of dilated cardiomyopathy associated with this mutation and strongly suggest that Ca 2ϩ sensitizers are beneficial for the treatment of dilated cardiomyopathy patients affected by sarcomeric regulatory protein mutations. (Circ Res. 2007;101:185-194.)Key Words: dilated cardiomyopathy Ⅲ troponin Ⅲ mutation Ⅲ calcium sensitivity Ⅲ knock-in mouse D ilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is a disorder of cardiac muscle characterized by cardiac enlargement and systolic dysfunction and accounts for more than 10 000 deaths annually by heart failure and sudden death in the United States. 1-3 DCM is known to result from nongenetic insults, such as viruses, alcohol, toxins, and immunologic injury; however, recent genetic studies have revealed that mutations in genes for cytoskeletal (dystrophin, desmin, ␦-sarcoglycan), nuclear envelope (tafazzin and lamin A/C), and sarcomeric (cardiac actin, -cardiac myosin heavy chain, ␣-tropomyosin, cardiac myosin-binding protein C, titin/connectin, cardiac troponin [cTn]T, cTnI, and cTnC) proteins are important causes of DCM, 4 and the incidence of the inherited DCM is thought to be 20% to 35%. [5][6][7] Cardiac muscle contraction is regulated through Ca 2ϩ binding to cardiac troponin complex localized on the thin filaments, 8 and DCM-causing mutations in troponin complex are associated with a malignant phenotype with a high incidence of premature cardiac death and heart transplantation. 9 Cardiac troponin complex consists of 3 components of distinct structure and function, cTnT, cTnI, and cTnC. cTnT has a structural role in anchoring troponin complex to the thin filaments through its binding to tropomyosin, cTnI inhibits the interaction ...
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