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Cell-free translation/translocation systems are broadly applied to examine gene expression and characterize the structure–function relationship of gene products. We present the characterization of Xenopus egg extract (XEE) translocation and processing of proteins synthesized in rabbit reticulocyte lysate. The XEE was prepared from eggs laid by adult female frogs that received serial injections of gonadotropins. The eggs were then dejellied in 2% l-cysteine–HCl and the cytoplasm extracted by centrifugation at 10,000 rpm for 15 min. The in vitro translocation and processing of XEE was examined with a cell-free translation system containing reticulocyte lysate, and appropriate messenger ribonucleic acid (RNA) or complementary deoxyribonucleic acid plasmids with RNA polymerase. Cell-free production of the following proteins were used to assess posttranslational modifications: Escherichia coli β-lactamase for signal sequence cleavage, Sarcomyces cerevisiae α-mating factor for translocation and N-linked glycosylation, the soluble protein luciferase for functional activity, and the membrane-bound human insulin receptor for translation efficiency. All translation products were identified by [35S]-methionine labeling, sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and fluorography. The results demonstrate that (1) XEE produces near-complete signal sequence and N-glycosylation processing of proteins synthesized in reticulocyte lysate, (2) XEE contains endoplasmic reticulum–equivalent microsomes, which allows for protein translocation and protease protection, (3) the addition of XEE in the translation reaction does not affect synthesis and chemiluminescence activity of luciferase, (4) XEE is efficient in processing the nascent 160-kDa human insulin receptor precursor, a transmembrane protein, and (5) as compared to canine pancreatic microsomes, XEE translocation efficiency is minimally decreased with the addition of dimethylsulfoxide. These results are the first description of the combined use of XEE with reticulocyte lysate and clearly demonstrate a higher efficiency of translocation and processing compared to canine pancreatic microsomes. This method of cell-free translation and processing allows for more extensive in vitro examination of posttranslational modifications of secretory and membrane-bound proteins.
A murine endothelial cell line was recently established from microvessels that had invaded a subcutaneous sponge implant (Dong, Q. G.; Bernasconi, S.; Lostaglio, S., et al. Arterioscl. Thromb. Vasc. Biol. 17:1599–1604; 1997). From these sponge-induced endothelial (SIE) cells, we have isolated two subpopulations endowed with different phenotypic properties. Clone SIE-F consists of large, highly spread cells that have a relatively slow growth rate, form contact-inhibited monolayers, do not grow under anchorage-independent conditions, express elevated levels of thrombospondin-1 (TSP-1) and are not tumorigenic in vivo. In contrast, clone SIE-S2 consists of small, spindle-shaped cells that have a high proliferation rate, do not show contact-inhibition, grow under anchorage-independent conditions, express very low levels of TSP-1 and are tumorigenic in vivo. Both clones express the endothelial markers vascular endothelial-cadherin and vascular intercellular adhesion molecule-1, but do not express CD31 and E-selectin. In addition, SIE-S2 cells, but not SIE-F cells, express the α-smooth muscle actin isoform. SIE-S2 cells, but not SIE-F cells, are able to form branching tubes in fibrin gels. The SIE-F and SIE-S2 clones, which have properties of nontransformed and transformed cells, respectively, should provide useful tools to investigate physiological and pathological processes involving vascular endothelium.
I. CAROLINE LE POOLE, RAYMOND E. BOISSY, RANGAPRASAD SARANGARAJAN, JING CHEN, JUDITH J. FORRISTAL, PRANAV SHETH, WIETE WESTERHOF, GEORGE BABCOCK, PRANAB K. DAS, CATHARINE B. SAELINGER
Vitiligo is an enigmatic pigmentary disorder of the skin. Factors potentially involved in the progressive loss of melanocytes from the basal layer of the epidermis include genetically determined aberrancies of the vitiligo melanocyte. It follows that analysis of melanocytes cultured from vitiligo donors can contribute to a further understanding of the etiopathomechanism. A setback for vitiligo research has been the limited availability of vitiligo-derived melanocytes. To overcome this limitation, we have generated a vitiligo melanocyte cell line according to a protocol established previously for the immortalization of normal human melanocytes. Vitiligo melanocytes Ma9308P4 were transfected with HPV16 E6 and E7 genes using the retroviral construct LXSN16E6E7. Successful transformants were selected using geneticin and subsequently cloned to ensure genetic homogeneity. The resulting cell line PIG3V has undergone more than 100 cell population doublings since its establishment as a confluent primary culture, whereas untransfected melanocytes derived from adult skin senesce after a maximum of 50 population doublings. Cells immortalized by this transfection procedure retain lineage-specific characteristics and proliferate significantly faster than parental cells. In this study, the phenotype of PIG3V resembled melanocytes rather than melanoma cells in culture. Tyrosinase was processed properly and melanosomes remained pigmented. Importantly, ultrastructural characterization of PIG3V cells revealed dilated endoplasmic reticulum profiles characteristic of vitiligo melanocytes. An explanation for this dilation may be found in the retention of proteins with molecular weight of 37.5, 47.5, and 56.5 kDa, as determined by gel electrophoresis of microsomal proteins isolated from radiolabeled cells.
Increasing concerns over the effects of environmental estrogens on wildlife and humans have highlighted the need for screening systems to assess potentially estrogenic effects of test compounds. As a result, in vitro screening methods such as cell proliferation assays using the estrogen-responsive human breast cancer cell line, MCF-7, have been developed. The present study describes an alternative in vitro approach for the assessment of such xenoestrogens, based on estrogenic rescue of MCF-7 cells from antiestrogen-induced cytotoxicity. This method measures the ability of various estrogenic compounds to compete with a known estrogen-receptor–mediated antihormonal drug, 4-hydroxytamoxifen, using the 1-[4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl]– 3,5-diphenylformazan (MTT) assay to assess mitochondrial activity. Because 4-hydroxytamoxifen treatment of cells results in a dramatic decrease in mitochondrial dehydrogenase activity which is directly related to their estrogen-receptor content, inhibition of this effect with estrogenic compounds represents an estrogen–receptor interaction, or estrogenic rescue. The estrogenic compounds tested include a weak xenoestrogen, bisphenol A (BPA), and two biological estrogens, 17α- and 17β-estradiol. Competitive inhibition of 4-hydroxytamoxifen–induced cytotoxicity by BPA was compared to that of the biological estrogens. The results indicate that the biological estrogens can successfully compete with the antiestrogen in a dose-dependent manner. In addition, the assay is sensitive enough to detect estrogenic rescue by even the very weak xenoestrogen, BPA, albeit at high BPA concentrations. This simple in vitro method could be used as an alternative or second-line screen for potential xenoestrogens.
Our purpose was to engineer three-dimensional skeletal muscle tissue constructs from primary cultures of adult rat myogenic precursor cells, and to measure their excitability and isometric contractile properties. The constructs, termed myooids, were muscle-like in appearance, excitability, and contractile function. The myooids were 12 mm long and ranged in diameter from 0.1 to 1 mm. The myooids were engineered with synthetic tendons at each end to permit the measurement of isometric contractile properties. Within each myooid the myotubes and fibroblasts were supported by an extracellular matrix generated by the cells themselves, and did not require a preexisting scaffold to define the size, shape, and general mechanical properties of the resulting structure. Once formed, the myooids contracted spontaneously at approximately 1 Hz, with peak-to-peak force amplitudes ranging from 3 to 30 μN. When stimulated electrically the myooids contracted to produce force. The myooids (n = 14) had the following mean values: diameter of 0.49 mm, rheobase of 1.0 V/mm, chronaxie of 0.45 ms, twitch force of 215 μN, maximum isometric force of 440 μN, resting baseline force of 181 μN, and specific force of 2.9 kN/m2. The mean specific force was approximately 1% of the specific force generated by control adult rat muscle. Based on the functional data, the myotubes in the myooids appear to remain arrested in an early developmental state due to the absence of signals to promote expression of adult myosin isoforms.
Type IV collagen is a major basement membrane component that has been implicated in the regulation of angiogenesis. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of type IV collagen on the angiogenic response of native endothelial cells in three-dimensional vascular organ culture. Rings of rat aorta were cultured under serum-free conditions in gels of type I collagen with or without type IV collagen. In the absence of type IV collagen, aortic rings generated neovessels, which proliferated until day 9 and gradually regressed during the second and third weeks of culture. Type IV collagen promoted neovessel elongation and survival in a dose-dependent manner. Microvascular length increased by 43, 57, and 119% over control values in cultures treated with 3, 30, and 300 μg/ml type IV collagen, respectively. When used at high concentrations (300 μg/ml) type IV collagen stabilized the neovascular outgrowths and prevented vascular regression. Type IV collagen also promoted the formation of neovessels, but significant stimulatory effects were observed only at an intermediate concentration (30 μg/ml) and were no longer significant at the high concentration (300 μg/ml). The observation that type IV collagen has dose-dependent effects on vascular elongation, proliferation, and stabilization, supports the concept that the developing basement membrane of neovessels acts as a solid-phase regulator of angiogenesis, whose function varies depending on the concentration of its molecular components.
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