Selective expression of CYP2A13 in human pancreatic α-islet cells. Guo, Yu, et al. Drug Metab. Dispos., 40: 1878-82 (2012)
2011
Show Abstract
Exposure to cigarette smoke is an etiological factor of human pancreatic cancer and has been associated with an increased risk of pancreatic diseases, including pancreatitis and diabetes. The toxicants in cigarette smoke can reach pancreatic tissue, and most of the toxicants require cytochrome P450 (P450)-mediated metabolic activation to exert their toxicity. Among all the human P450 enzymes, CYP2A13 is the most efficient enzyme in the metabolic activation of 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK), a major tobacco-specific toxicant and a suspected human carcinogen. It also metabolically activates 4-aminobiphenyl, another toxicant in cigarette smoke. Immunohistochemical analysis in this study demonstrated that CYP2A13 was selectively expressed in the islets but not in the exocrine portion of adult human pancreas. Further study using dual immunofluorescence labeling technique showed that CYP2A13 protein was mainly expressed in the α-islet but not in β-islet cells. The selective expression of CYP2A13 in human pancreatic α-islet cells suggests that these islet cells could be damaged by the toxicants existing in cigarette smoke through CYP2A13-mediated in situ metabolic activation. Our result provides a mechanistic insight for human pancreatic diseases that have been associated with cigarette smoke exposure. | 22798551
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Histone exchange activity and its correlation with histone acetylation status in porcine oocytes. Endo, T; Imai, A; Shimaoka, T; Kano, K; Naito, K Reproduction (Cambridge, England)
141
397-405
2010
Show Abstract
In mammalian oocytes, histone H3 and histone H4 (H4) in the chromatin are highly acetylated at the germinal vesicle (GV) stage, and become globally deacetylated after GV breakdown (GVBD). Although nuclear core histones can be exchanged by cytoplasmic free histones in somatic cells, it remains unknown whether this is also the case in mammalian oocytes. In this study, we examined the histone exchange activity in maturing porcine oocytes before and after GVBD, and investigated the correlations between this activity and both the acetylation profile of the H4 N-terminal tail and the global histone acetylation level in the chromatin. We injected Flag-tagged H4 (H4-Flag) mRNA into GV oocytes, and found that the Flag signal was localized to the chromatin. We next injected mRNAs of mutated H4-Flag, which lack all acetylation sites and the whole N-terminal tail, and found that the H4 N-terminal tail and its modification were not necessary for histone incorporation into chromatin. Despite the lack of acetylation sites, the mutated H4-Flag mRNA injection did not decrease the acetylation level on the chromatin, indicating that the histone exchange occurs partially in the GV chromatin. In contrast to GV oocytes, the Flag signal was not detected on the chromatin after the injection of H4-Flag protein into the second meiotic metaphase oocytes. These results suggest that histone exchange activity changes during meiotic maturation in porcine oocytes, and that the acetylation profile of the H4 N-terminal tail has no effect on histone incorporation into chromatin and does not affect the global level of histone acetylation in it. | 21239526
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Corticocortical associative neurons expressing latexin: specific cortical connectivity formed in vivo and in vitro. Y Arimatsu, M Ishida, M Sato, M Kojima Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991)
9
569-76
1998
Show Abstract
Latexin, a carboxypeptidase A inhibitor, is expressed in a subset of neurons in the infragranular layers of the lateral cortex in the rat. We here show that latexin-expressing neurons exhibit ultrastructural features common to cortical pyramidal neurons. We show in combined retrograde tracing and immunofluorescent experiments that latexin-expressing neurons contribute to specific corticocortical pathways. Thus, injections of the retrograde tracer fluorogold into either the primary somatosensory (SI) or the primary motor (MI) cortical area labeled many latexin-expressing neurons in the infragranular layers of the secondary somatosensory (SII) and visceral sensory (Vi) areas. In contrast, tracer injections involving the thalamus, striatum, or contralateral SII and Vi exclusively labeled latexin-nonexpressing neurons in both the SII and Vi. Finally, we show that the correct corticocortical projections can be formed in organotypic slice cultures in vitro from latexin-expressing neurons: when slices of developing SII were cocultured with those from the SI and the thalamus, latexin-immunoreactive neurons in the SII projected preferentially to their normal SI target. The specific connectivity formed in vivo and in vitro by this molecularly distinct neuronal population reveals its characteristic manner of cortical organization and provides a unique model system to analyze mechanisms underlying the formation of precise corticocortical pathways. | 10498275
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Hamster pulmonary endocrine cells with positive immunostaining for calbindin-D28K. T Ito, N Udaka, Y Inayama, H Kitamura, M Kanisawa Histochemistry and cell biology
109
67-73
1998
Show Abstract
We have examined the distribution of calcium-binding proteins (CaBPs) in adult and fetal lungs of Syrian golden hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus) using immunostaining with confocal laser microscopy and electron microscopy. Single and grouped (neuroepithelial body; NEB) endocrine cells were distributed from bronchi to alveolar ducts in the adult lung. Serial frozen sections immunostained for CaBPs in combination with immunostaining for endocrine markers such as calcitonin gene-related peptide, serotonin, PGP9.5, and synaptophysin revealed that positive immunostaining for calbindin-D28K (CB-D28K) was seen in single endocrine cells and NEBs. However, other so-called EF-hand family CaBPs, parvalbumin and calretinin, were not detected. Electron microscopically, positive immunoreaction for CB-D28K was mainly in the organelle-free cytoplasmic matrix of endocrine cells, and partly in nuclei and associated with secretory granules and endoplasmic reticulum. In fetal developing lungs, endocrine cells appeared first on gestational day 13, and they were positive for all the endocrine markers used. However, pulmonary endocrine cells were positively immunostained for CB-D28K from gestational days 15 and 16 onward. In summary, our observations suggest that CB-D28K is a useful marker for endocrine cells of the lung, and CB-D28K could function as a mediator of endocrine stimulation or calcium homeostasis in pulmonary endocrine cells. | 9452957
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