Neuronal intranuclear inclusion disease (NIID) has highly variable clinical manifestations. Sone et al. describe the clinical and pathological features of 57 adult-onset cases diagnosed by postmortem dissection/antemortem skin biopsy. They report ‘dementia dominant’ and ‘limb weakness’ subtypes, and recommend consideration of NIID in the differential diagnosis of leukoencephalopathy and neuropathy.
Retinoid X receptor (RXR) is a nuclear receptor that plays important and multiple roles in mammalian development and homeostasis. We previously reported that, in human choriocarcinoma cells, tributyltin chloride and triphenyltin hydroxide, which are typical environmental contaminants and cause masculinization in female mollusks, are potent stimulators of human chorionic gonadotropin production and aromatase activity, which play key endocrine functions in maintaining pregnancy and fetal development. However, the molecular mechanism through which these compounds stimulate these endocrine functions remains unclear. Our current study shows that trialkyltin compounds, including tributyltin chloride and triphenyltin hydroxide, function as RXR agonists. Trialkyltins directly bind to the ligand-binding domain of RXR with high affinity and function as transcriptional activators. Unlike the natural RXR ligand, 9-cis-retinoic acid, the activity of trialkyltins is RXR specific and does not activate the retinoic acid receptor pathway. In addition, trialkyltins activate RXR to stimulate the expression of a luciferase reporter gene containing the human placental promoter I.1 sequence of aromatase, suggesting that trialkyltins stimulate human placental endocrine functions through RXR-dependent signaling pathways. Therefore, our results suggest that activation of RXR may be a novel mechanism by which trialkyltins alter human endocrine functions.
The effects of adenosine (ADO) analogs on cells of the human promyelocytic HL-60 line were examined. ADO A(3) receptor agonists, N(6)-(3-iodobenzyl)adenosine-5'-N-methylcarboxamide (IB-MECA, 30-60 microM) and 2-chloro-N(6)-(3-iodobenzyl)adenosine-5'-N-methyluronamide (CI-IB-MECA, 10-30 microM) induced apoptotic cell death. In contrast, neither an A(1)/A(2) antagonist (XAC) nor other selective ADO receptor agonists (CPA, NECA and CGS21680) induced apoptosis at concentrations of <30 microM. Both IB-MECA and CI-IB-MECA significantly induced Ca(2+) release from intracellular Ca(2+) pools followed by Ca(2+) influx, suggesting the presence of phospholipase C-coupled ADO A(3) receptors on HL-60 cells. This was further supported by the presence of mRNA of ADO A3 receptor in the cells. These results suggest that activation of ADO A(3) receptors is responsible for the ADO-induced apoptosis in HL-60 cells and could be of potential therapeutic value in the treatment of leukemia.
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