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Showing papers on "Cellular differentiation published in 1989"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Two types of cloned helper T cells are described, defined primarily by differences in the pattern of lymphokines ynthesized, and the different functions of the two types of cells and their lymphokine synthesis are discussed.
Abstract: Effector functions in the immune system are carried out by a variety of cell types, and as our understanding of the complexity of the system expands, the number of recognized subdivisions of cell types also continues to increase. B lymphocytes, producing antibody, were initially distinguished from T lymphocytes, which provide help for B cells (1, 2). The T-cell population was further divided when surface markers allowed separation of helper cells from cytotoxic cells (3). Although there were persistent reports of heterogeneity in the helper T-cell compartment (reviewed below), only relatively recently were distinct types of helper cells resolved. In this review we describe the differences between two types of cloned helper T cells, defined primarily by differences in the pattern of lymphokines ynthesized, and we also discuss the different functions of the two types of cells and their lymphokines. Patterns of lymphokine synthesis are convenient and explicit markers to describe T-cell subclass differences, and evidence increases that many of the functions of helper T cells are predicted by the functions of the lymphokines that they synthesize after activation by antigen and presenting cells. The separation of many mouse helper T-cell clones into these two distinct types is now well established, but their origin in normal T-cell populations is still not clear. Further divisions of helper T cells may have to be recognized before a complete picture of helper T-cell function can be obtained.

7,814 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
24 Feb 1989-Cell
TL;DR: The isolation, sequence, and initial characterization of the cDNA for the muscle-specific regulatory factor skeletal myogenin are described, and together with myd may constitute a set of factors that interact to regulate the determination and differentiation of muscle cells.

1,210 citations


Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: Because cytokine functions are complex and overlapping, the development of precise, monospecific bioassays, and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs) was essential, before a clear picture of T cell cytokine synthesis could be obtained.
Abstract: Publisher Summary Because cytokine functions are complex and overlapping, the development of precise, monospecific bioassays, and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs) was essential, before a clear picture of T cell cytokine synthesis could be obtained. In vitro , some mast cell lines synthesize IL-4 and other cytokines of the Th2 pattern in response to cross-linking of surface IgE. Although functional evidence using mixed cell populations suggested different types of Th cells, the lack of discriminatory cell-surface markers has hampered efforts to define the different subtypes. The development of in vitro T cell clones led to the description of four types of helper T cell clones, and later, two types of Th clones (Th1 and Th2) were defined on the basis of different patterns of cytokine secretion. These patterns have been confirmed in several panels of Th clones and this is currently the most clear-cut criterion for separation of mouse Th subtypes. As the two types differ in the synthesis of many cytokines, and the cytokines have a major role in the regulation of immune responses, the two types of Th cells have markedly different functions. When injected simultaneously with antigen into the footpads of naive mice, Th1 clones cause an antigen-specific and major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-restricted inflammatory reaction that peaks at about 24 hours. Th2 clones do not produce a swelling reaction under these conditions. One of the major functions of helper T cells is to provide signals for activation, proliferation, and differentiation to B cells that have encountered an antigen. Several strategies have been employed for studying the functions of mouse Th clones in micro and for analyzing the roles of specific Th products in these functions. In spite of the clear dichotomy of mouse Th1 and Th2 clones, and the accumulating evidence for their involvement in normal immune responses, human T cells do not appear to segregate into two clear subsets. Many human T cell clones secrete both Th1and Th2 cytokines.

1,100 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
18 Aug 1989-Science
TL;DR: Polarized epithelial cells play fundamental roles in the ontogeny and function of a variety of tissues and organs in mammals and are the first overt sign of cellular differentiation in early embryonic development.
Abstract: Polarized epithelial cells play fundamental roles in the ontogeny and function of a variety of tissues and organs in mammals. The morphogenesis of a sheet of polarized epithelial cells (the trophectoderm) is the first overt sign of cellular differentiation in early embryonic development. In the adult, polarized epithelial cells line all body cavities and occur in tissues that carry out specialized vectorial transport functions of absorption and secretion. The generation of this phenotype is a multistage process requiring extracellular cues and the reorganization of proteins in the cytoplasm and on the plasma membrane; once established, the phenotype is maintained by the segregation and retention of specific proteins and lipids in distinct apical and basal-lateral plasma membrane domains.

1,064 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
04 May 1989-Nature
TL;DR: Four colony-stimulating factors interact in a complex way to regulate the differentiation and maturation of the granulocyte and macrophage lineages and have potential applications for the clinical manipulation of blood-cell production.
Abstract: Several glycoproteins that control blood-cell production and function have been purified and sequenced. The four colony-stimulating factors interact in a complex way to regulate the differentiation and maturation of the granulocyte and macrophage lineages and have potential applications for the clinical manipulation of blood-cell production.

1,058 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
20 Jan 1989-Science
TL;DR: The view is put forth that signals originating from separate cell membrane receptors are integrated at the level of the responsive gene and initiate a contingent series of gene activations that bring about proliferation and impart immunologic function.
Abstract: Interaction of antigen in the proper histocompatibility context with the T lymphocyte antigen receptor leads to an orderly series of events resulting in morphologic change, proliferation, and the acquisition of immunologic function. In most T lymphocytes two signals are required to initiate this process, one supplied by the antigen receptor and the other by accessory cells or agents that activate protein kinase C. Recently, DNA sequences have been identified that act as response elements for one or the other of the two signals, but do not respond to both signals. The fact that these sequences lie within the control regions of the same genes suggests that signals originating from separate cell membrane receptors are integrated at the level of the responsive gene. The view is put forth that these signals initiate a contingent series of gene activations that bring about proliferation and impart immunologic function.

1,047 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
22 Sep 1989-Cell
TL;DR: It is reported here that the phosphorylation state of RB protein is modulated during normal cellular events, and time course studies indicate that RB dephosphorylation precedes the total arrest of cell growth during differentiation.

953 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The ability of MyoD to activate muscle genes in a variety of differentiated cell lines suggests that no additional tissue-specific factors are needed to activate the downstream program for terminal muscle differentiation or that, if such factors exist, they are themselves activated by Myo D expression.
Abstract: MyoD is a master regulatory gene for myogenesis. Under the control of a retroviral long terminal repeat, MyoD was expressed in a variety of differentiated cell types by using either a DNA transfection vector or a retrovirus. Expression of muscle-specific proteins was observed in chicken, human, and rat primary fibroblasts and in differentiated melanoma, neuroblastoma, liver, and adipocyte lines. The ability of MyoD to activate muscle genes in a variety of differentiated cell lines suggests that no additional tissue-specific factors other than MyoD are needed to activate the downstream program for terminal muscle differentiation or that, if such factors exist, they are themselves activated by MyoD expression.

951 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is proposed that FGF-stimulated endothelial cells may be "switched" between growth, differentiation, and involution modes during angiogenesis by altering the adhesivity or mechanical integrity of their ECM.
Abstract: The angiogenic factor, basic fibroblast growth factor (FGF), either stimulates endothelial cell growth or promotes capillary differentiation depending upon the microenvironment in which it acts. Analysis of various in vitro models of spontaneous angiogenesis, in combination with time-lapse cinematography, demonstrated that capillary tube formation was greatly facilitated by promoting multicellular retraction and cell elevation above the surface of the rigid culture dish or by culturing endothelial cells on malleable extracellular matrix (ECM) substrata. These observations suggested to us that mechanical (i.e., tension-dependent) interactions between endothelial cells and ECM may serve to regulate capillary development. To test this hypothesis, FGF-stimulated endothelial cells were grown in chemically defined medium on bacteriological (nonadhesive) dishes that were precoated with different densities of fibronectin. Extensive cell spreading and growth were promoted by fibronectin coating densities that were highly adhesive (greater than 500 ng/cm2), whereas cell rounding, detachment, and loss of viability were observed on dishes coated with low fibronectin concentrations (less than 100 ng/cm2). Intermediate fibronectin coating densities (100-500 ng/cm2) promoted cell extension, but they could not completely resist cell tractional forces. Partial retraction of multicellular aggregates resulted in cell shortening, cessation of growth, and formation of branching tubular networks within 24-48 h. Multicellular retraction and subsequent tube formation also could be elicited on highly adhesive dishes by overcoming the mechanical resistance of the substratum using higher cell plating numbers. Dishes coated with varying concentrations of type IV collagen or gelatin produced similar results. These results suggest that ECM components may act locally to regulate the growth and pattern-regulating actions of soluble FGF based upon their ability to resist cell-generated mechanical loads. Thus, we propose that FGF-stimulated endothelial cells may be "switched" between growth, differentiation, and involution modes during angiogenesis by altering the adhesivity or mechanical integrity of their ECM.

887 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Nucleotide sequence analysis and the identification of the corresponding gene indicate that human Myf‐5 is a member of a small gene family which also contains the human homologue to MyoD1, a different protein which nevertheless is capable of inducing the myogenic phenotype in embryonic C3H mouse 10T1/2 ‘fibroblasts’.
Abstract: We have isolated the cDNA encoding a novel human myogenic factor, Myf-5, by weak cross-hydridization to the mouse MyoD1 probe. Nucleotide sequence analysis and the identification of the corresponding gene indicate that human Myf-5 is a member of a small gene family which also contains the human homologue to MyoD1. Although structurally related to the mouse factor, the human Myf-5 constitutes a different protein which nevertheless is capable of inducing the myogenic phenotype in embryonic C3H mouse 10T1/2 'fibroblasts'. The existence of more than one MyoD1-like protein in human skeletal muscle is further suggested by the detection of several similar but distinct cDNA clones. The phenotypic conversion of 10T1/2 cells by the human factor is recognized by the capacity of the cells to form multinucleated syncytia and synthesize sarcomeric myosin heavy chains. Moreover, transient expression of Myf-5 in 10T1/2 cells leads to the activation of a co-transfected muscle-specific CAT reporter gene which by itself is transcriptionally silent in the non-muscle cell background. The deduced amino acid sequence of clone Myf-5 reveals a region which is highly similar to myc proteins and the developmental factors from Drosophila encoded by the achaete scute locus and the twist gene. The myc homology region and a preceding cluster of basic amino acids are located in a larger sequence domain with strong similarity to the mouse myogenic factor MyoD1. Two additional short segments with high serine and threonine content are conserved between the two proteins.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

851 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Feb 1989-Blood
TL;DR: Data demonstrated a paracrine but not autocrine regulation of the growth and differentiation of myeloma cells by IL-6, which is not the autocrine growth factor of these well-documented human myelomatic cell lines.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The existence of a family of myogenic regulatory genes that share a conserved motif with c-myc is suggested, which is sufficient to activate the muscle differentiation program and may substitute for MyoD1 in certain developmental situations.
Abstract: MyoD1 is a nuclear phosphoprotein that is expressed in skeletal muscle in vivo and in certain muscle cell lines in vitro; it has been shown to convert fibroblasts to myoblasts through a mechanism requiring a domain with homology to the myc family of proteins. The BC3H1 muscle cell line expresses skeletal muscle-specific genes upon exposure to mitogen-deficient medium, but does not express MyoD1 at detectable levels. To determine whether BC3H1 cells may express regulatory genes functionally related to MyoD1, a cDNA library prepared from differentiated BC3H1 myocytes, was screened at reduced stringency with the region of the MyoD1 cDNA that shares homology with c-myc. From this screen, a cDNA was identified that encodes a major open reading frame with 72% homology to the myc domain and basic region of MyoD1. The mRNA encoded by this MyoD1-related gene is expressed in skeletal muscle in vivo and in differentiated skeletal myocytes in vitro and is undetectable in cardiac or smooth muscle, nonmuscle tissues, or nonmyogenic cell types. During myogenesis, the MyoD1-related mRNA accumulates several hours prior to other muscle-specific mRNAs and therefore represents an early molecular marker for entry of myoblasts into the differentiation pathway. Transient transfection of 10T1/2 or 3T3 cells with the MyoD1-related cDNA is sufficient to induce myosin heavy-chain expression and to activate a reporter gene under transcriptional control of the muscle creatine kinase 5' enhancer, which functions only in differentiated myocytes. Expression of this cDNA in stably transfected 10T1/2 cells also leads to fusion and muscle-specific gene expression upon exposure to mitogen-deficient medium. Thus, the product of this MyoD1-related gene is sufficient to activate the muscle differentiation program and may substitute for MyoD1 in certain developmental situations. Together, these results suggest the existence of a family of myogenic regulatory genes that share a conserved motif with c-myc.

Journal ArticleDOI
08 Sep 1989-Cell
TL;DR: It is shown that the laminin-derived synthetic peptide YIGSR contains sufficient information to induce single endothelial cells to form ring-like structures surrounding a hollow lumen, the basic putative unit in the formation of capillaries.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is reported that tissue-specific vectorial secretion coincides with the formation of functional alveoli-like structures by primary mammary epithelial cells cultured on a reconstituted basement membrane matrix (derived from Engelbreth-Holm-Swarm murine tumour), which reproduce the dual role of mammaries to secrete vectorially and to sequester milk proteins.
Abstract: An essential feature of mammary gland differentiation during pregnancy is the formation of alveoli composed of polarized epithelial cells, which, under the influence of lactogenic hormones, secrete vectorially and sequester milk proteins. Previous culture studies have described either organization of cells polarized towards lumina containing little or no demonstrable tissue-specific protein, or establishment of functional secretory cells exhibiting little or no glandular architecture. In this paper, we report that tissue-specific vectorial secretion coincides with the formation of functional alveoli-like structures by primary mammary epithelial cells cultured on a reconstituted basement membrane matrix (derived from Engelbreth-Holm-Swarm murine tumour). Morphogenesis of these unique three-dimensional structures was initiated by cell-directed remodelling of the exogenous matrix leading to reorganization of cells into matrix-ensheathed aggregates by 24 h after plating. The aggregates subsequently cavitated, so that by day 6 the cells were organized into hollow spheres in which apical cell surfaces faced lumina sealed by tight junctions and basal surfaces were surrounded by a distinct basal lamina. The profiles of proteins secreted into the apical (luminal) and basal (medium) compartments indicated that these alveoli-like structures were capable of an appreciable amount of vectorial secretion. Immunoprecipitation with a broad spectrum milk antiserum showed that more than 80% of caseins were secreted into the lumina, whereas iron-binding proteins (both lactoferrin and transferrin) were present in comparable amounts in each compartment. Thus, these mammary cells established protein targeting pathways directing milk-specific proteins to the luminal compartment. A time course monitoring secretory activity demonstrated that establishment of tissue-specific vectorial secretion and increased total and milk protein secretion coincided with functional alveolar-like multicellular architecture. This culture system is unique among models of epithelial cell polarity in that it demonstrates several aspects of epithelial cell polarization: vectorial secretion, apical junctions, a sequestered compartment and formation of a basal lamina. These lumina-containing structures therefore reproduce the dual role of mammary epithelia to secrete vectorially and to sequester milk proteins. Thus, in addition to maintaining tissue-specific cytodifferentiation and function, a basement membrane promotes the expression of tissue-like morphogenesis.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Five of the gadd cDNA clones encode transcripts that are increased by other growth cessation signals: growth arrest by serum reduction, medium depletion, contact inhibition, or a 24-h exposure to hydroxyurea, suggesting that these genes may represent part of a novel regulatory pathway involved in the negative control of mammalian cell growth.
Abstract: More than 20 different cDNA clones encoding DNA-damage-inducible transcripts in rodent cells have recently been isolated by hybridization subtraction (A. J. Fornace, Jr., I. Alamo, Jr., and M. C. Hollander, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 85:8800-8804, 1988). In most cells, one effect of DNA damage is the transient inhibition of DNA synthesis and cell growth. We now show that five of our clones encode transcripts that are increased by other growth cessation signals: growth arrest by serum reduction, medium depletion, contact inhibition, or a 24-h exposure to hydroxyurea. The genes coding for these transcripts have been designated gadd (growth arrest and DNA damage inducible). Two of the gadd cDNA clones were found to hybridize at high stringency to transcripts from human cells that were induced after growth cessation signals or treatment with DNA-damaging agents, which indicates that these responses have been conserved during mammalian evolution. In contrast to results with growth-arrested cells that still had the capacity to grow after removal of the growth arrest conditions, no induction occurred in HL60 cells when growth arrest was produced by terminal differentiation, indicating that only certain kinds of growth cessation signals induce these genes. All of our experiments suggest that the gadd genes are coordinately regulated: the kinetics of induction for all five transcripts were similar; in addition, overexpression of gadd genes was found in homozygous deletion c14CoS/c14CoS mice that are missing a small portion of chromosome 7, suggesting that a trans-acting factor encoded by a gene in this deleted portion is a negative effector of the gadd genes. The gadd genes may represent part of a novel regulatory pathway involved in the negative control of mammalian cell growth.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The hypothesis that all LHRH cells in the central nervous system arise from a discrete group of progenitor cells inThe olfactory placode and that a subpopulation of these cells migrate into forebrain areas where they subsequently establish an adult-like distribution is supported.
Abstract: In situ hybridization histochemistry and immunocytochemistry were used to study the prenatal expression of luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) cells in the mouse. Cells expressing LHRH mRNA and peptide product were first detected on embryonic day 11.5 (E11.5) in the olfactory pit. On E12.5, the majority of LHRH cells were located on "tracks" extending from the olfactory pit to the base of the telencephalon. From E12.5 to E15.5, LHRH cells were detected in a rostral-to-caudal gradient in forebrain areas. Prior to E12.5, cells expressing LHRH mRNA were not detected in forebrain areas known to contain LHRH cells in postnatal animals. Quantitation of cells expressing LHRH mRNA showed that the number of labeled cells on E12.5 (approximately 800) equaled the number of LHRH cells in postnatal animals, but more than 90% of these cells were located in nasal regions. Between E12.5 and E15.5, the location of LHRH cells shifted. The number of LHRH cells in the forebrain increased, while the number of LHRH cells in nasal regions decreased over this same period. These findings establish that cells first found in the olfactory pit and thereafter in forebrain areas express the LHRH gene and correspond to the position of LHRH immunopositive cells found at these developmental times. To further examine the ontogeny of the LHRH system, immunocytochemistry in combination with [3H]thymidine autoradiography was used to determine when LHRH cells left the mitotic cycle. We show that LHRH neurons exhibit a discrete time of birth, suggesting that they arise as a single neuronal population between E10.0 and E11.0. Postnatal LHRH neurons were "birth-dated" shortly after differentiation of the olfactory placode and before LHRH mRNA was expressed in cells in the olfactory pit. Taken together, these studies support the hypothesis that all LHRH cells in the central nervous system arise from a discrete group of progenitor cells in the olfactory placode and that a subpopulation of these cells migrate into forebrain areas where they subsequently establish an adult-like distribution.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that adult human adipose tissue still contains precursor cells that are able to undergo adipose differentiation in vitro and this improved culture system may offer the opportunity to characterize other adipogenic factors as well as antiadipogenic factors involved in the control of adipose tissues growth.
Abstract: Stromal-vascular cells obtained from adult human subcutaneous adipose tissue were cultured in a chemically defined serum-free medium. In the presence of 0.2 nM triiodothyronine and 0.5 microM insulin, up to 25% of the cells were able to undergo terminal adipose differentiation within 18 d, as assessed by lipid accumulation and the expression of lipoprotein lipase (LPL) and glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GPDH) activities. Addition of cortisol resulted in a potent dose-dependent stimulation of the adipose differentiation process. Cortisol could be replaced by dexamethasone and partly by aldosterone, but not by sex steroids. The proportion of differentiated cells was dependent upon the age of the donor; when isolated from young adults, up to 70% of the stromal-vascular cells expressed the adipocyte phenotype as compared with 5-10% when the cells were isolated from the oldest subjects. An inverse relationship was observed between the age of the 27 normal-weight donors and the extent of GPDH expression after maintenance of the cells for 18 d in chemically defined medium supplemented with insulin, triiodothyronine, and cortisol (r = -0.787, P less than 0.001). It is concluded that adult human adipose tissue still contains precursor cells that are able to undergo adipose differentiation in vitro. This improved culture system may offer the opportunity to characterize other adipogenic factors as well as antiadipogenic factors involved in the control of adipose tissue growth.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The existence of a "sphingomyelin cycle" in human cells is demonstrated and it is demonstrated that such sphingolipid cycles may function in a signal transduction pathway and in cellular differentiation.

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 1989-Eye
TL;DR: The basic concept of stem cells, the reported findings of limbal stem cells for corneal epithelium, and their therapeutic applications are reviewed to gain a more complete understanding and increase proficiency in treating these diseases.
Abstract: Cumulative reported evidence indicates that some fraction of limbal basal epithelial cells are the stem cells for corneal epithelial cell proliferation and differentiation. Limbal epithelium is therefore crucial in maintaining the cell mass of corneal epithelium under normal conditions and plays an important role in corneal epithelial wound healing. Deficiency or absence of limbal stem cells explains well the pathogenesis of several ocular surface disorders characterised by defective conjunctival transdifferentiation or conjunctivalisation of cornea. This paper reviews and updates the basic concept of stem cells, the reported findings of limbal stem cells for corneal epithelium, and their therapeutic applications. Through this review, one hopes to gain a more complete understanding and increase proficiency in treating these diseases.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors define the regulatory mechanisms that mediate the selective activation of the mck enhancer in differentiating muscle cells and further delimited the boundaries of this enhancer and analyzed its interactions with nuclear factors from a variety of myogenic and nonmyogenic cell types.
Abstract: Exposure of skeletal myoblasts to growth factor-deficient medium results in transcriptional activation of muscle-specific genes, including the muscle creatine kinase gene (mck). Tissue specificity, developmental regulation, and high-level expression of mck are conferred primarily by a muscle-specific enhancer located between base pairs (bp) -1350 and -1048 relative to the transcription initiation site (E. A. Sternberg, G. Spizz, W. M. Perry, D. Vizard, T. Weil, and E. N. Olson, Mol. Cell. Biol. 8:2896-2909, 1988). To begin to define the regulatory mechanisms that mediate the selective activation of the mck enhancer in differentiating muscle cells, we have further delimited the boundaries of this enhancer and analyzed its interactions with nuclear factors from a variety of myogenic and nonmyogenic cell types. Deletion mutagenesis showed that the region between 1,204 and 1,095 bp upstream of mck functions as a weak muscle-specific enhancer that is dependent on an adjacent enhancer element for strong activity. This adjacent activating element does not exhibit enhancer activity in single copy but acts as a strong enhancer when multimerized. Gel retardation assays combined with DNase I footprinting and diethyl pyrocarbonate interference showed that a nuclear factor from differentiated C2 myotubes and BC3H1 myocytes recognized a conserved A + T-rich sequence within the peripheral activating region. This myocyte-specific enhancer-binding factor, designated MEF-2, was undetectable in nuclear extracts from C2 or BC3H1 myoblasts or several nonmyogenic cell lines. MEF-2 was first detectable within 2 h after exposure of myoblasts to mitogen-deficient medium and increased in abundance for 24 to 48 h thereafter. The appearance of MEF-2 required ongoing protein synthesis and was prevented by fibroblast growth factor and type beta transforming growth factor, which block the induction of muscle-specific genes. A myoblast-specific factor that is down regulated within 4 h after removal of growth factors was also found to bind to the MEF-2 recognition site. A 10-bp sequence, which was shown by DNase I footprinting and diethyl pyrocarbonate interference to interact directly with MEF-2, was identified within the rat and human mck enhancers, the rat myosin light-chain (mlc)-1/3 enhancer, and the chicken cardiac mlc-2A promoter. Oligomers corresponding to the region of the mlc-1/3 enhancer, which encompasses this conserved sequence, bound MEF-2 and competed for its binding to the mck enhancer. These results thus provide evidence for a novel myocyte-specific enhancer-binding factor, MEF-2, that is expressed early in the differentiation program and is suppressed by specific polypeptide growth factors. The ability of MEF-2 to recognize conserved activating elements associated with multiple-specific genes suggests that this factor may participate in the coordinate regulation of genes during myogenesis.

Journal ArticleDOI
15 Dec 1989-Science
TL;DR: Structural analysis and biological assays demonstrated that this protein is identical to a protein that regulates the growth and differentiation of embryonic stem cells and myeloid cells, and that stimulates bone remodeling and acute-phase protein synthesis in hepatocytes.
Abstract: A protein secreted by cultured rat heart cells can direct the choice of neurotransmitter phenotype made by cultured rat sympathetic neurons. Structural analysis and biological assays demonstrated that this protein is identical to a protein that regulates the growth and differentiation of embryonic stem cells and myeloid cells, and that stimulates bone remodeling and acute-phase protein synthesis in hepatocytes. This protein has been termed D factor, DIA, DIF, DRF, HSFIII, and LIF. Thus, this cytokine, like IL-6 and TGF beta, regulates growth and differentiation in the embryo and in the adult in many tissues, now including the nervous system.

Journal ArticleDOI
04 May 1989-Nature
TL;DR: It is reported that HIV gene expression in the monocyte lineage is regulated byNF-kB, the same transcription factor known to stimulate the HIV enhancer in activated T cells9; however, control of NF-kB and HIV in monocytes differs from that observed in T cells.
Abstract: THE latent period of AIDS is influenced by factors which activate human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) replication in different cell types. Although monocytic cells may provide a reservoir for virus production in vivo1–8, their regulation of HIV transcription has not been defined. We now report that HIV gene expression in the monocyte lineage is regulated by NF-kB, the same transcription factor known to stimulate the HIV enhancer in activated T cells9; however, control of NF-kB and HIV in monocytes differs from that observed in T cells. NF-kB-binding activity appears during the transition from promonocyte to monocyte in U937 cells induced to differentiate in vitro and is present constitutively in mature monocytes and macrophages. In a chronically infected pro-monocytic cell, Ul, differentiation is associated with HIV-1 replication as well as NF-kB binding activity. These findings suggest that NF-kB binding activity is developmentally regulated in the monocyte lineage, and that it provides one signal for HIV activation in these cells.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In vitro results suggest that the Ca2+ environment is a fundamental regulator of expression of epidermal differentiation markers and provide an explanation for the existence of theCa2+ gradient in vivo.
Abstract: Epidermal differentiation is characterized by a series of coordinated morphological and biochemical changes which result in a highly specialized, highly organized, stratified squamous epithelium. Among the specific markers expressed in differentiating epidermis are (a) two early spinous cell proteins, keratins 1 and 10 (K1 and K10); and (b) two later granular cell proteins, filaggrin and a cornified envelope precursor (CE). In vitro, epidermal basal cells are selectively cultured in 0.05 mM Ca2+ medium, and terminal differentiation is induced when the Ca2+ concentration is increased to 1 mM. However, only a small fraction of the cells express the markers K1, K10, CE, or filaggrin in the higher Ca2+ medium. To explore the factors required for marker expression, cultured epidermal cells were exposed to intermediate Ca2+ concentrations and extracts were analyzed using specific antibody and nucleic acid probes for the four markers of interest. These studies revealed that marker expression was enhanced at a restricted concentration of Ca2+ in the medium of 0.10-0.16 mM. At this Ca2+ concentration, both protein and mRNA levels for each marker were substantially increased, whereas at higher or lower Ca2+ concentrations they were diminished or undetected. The percentage of cells expressing each marker was increased two- to threefold in the permissive Ca2+ medium as determined by immunofluorescence analysis. This optimal level of Ca2+ was required both to initiate and sustain marker expression. At the permissive Ca2+ concentration, expression of the markers was sequential and similar to the order of appearance in vivo. K1 was expressed within 8-12 h and K10 was expressed in the ensuing 12-24-h period. CE and filaggrin were expressed in the subsequent 24 h. Inhibition of K1 expression by cycloheximide suggested that an inducible protein was involved. Other investigators have determined that a shallow Ca2+ gradient exists in epidermis, where the basal cells and spinous cells are in a Ca2+ environment substantially below serum Ca2+ levels. These in vitro results suggest that the Ca2+ environment is a fundamental regulator of expression of epidermal differentiation markers and provide an explanation for the existence of the Ca2+ gradient in vivo.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: By altering the concentrations of TGF‐beta, FGF, and IGF‐I, satellite cells can be induced to proliferate, differentiate, or to remain quiescent.
Abstract: Skeletal muscle satellite cells were cultured from mature rats and were treated in vitro with various combinations of transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta, fibroblast growth factor (FGF), and insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I). In serum-free defined medium the following observations were made: TGF-beta depressed proliferation and inhibited differentiation; FGF stimulated proliferation and depressed differentiation; IGF-I stimulated proliferation to a small degree but demonstrated a more pronounced stimulation of differentiation. In evaluating combinations of these three factors, the differentiation inhibiting effect of TGF-beta could not be counteracted by any combination of IGF-I or FGF. The proliferation-depressing activity of TGF-beta, however, could not inhibit the mitogenic activity of FGF. Maximum stimulation of proliferation was observed in the presence of both FGF and IGF-I. The highest percentage fusion was also observed under these conditions, but differentiation with minimal proliferation resulted from treatment with IGF-I, alone. By altering the concentrations of TGF-beta, FGF, and IGF-I, satellite cells can be induced to proliferate, differentiate, or to remain quiescent.

Journal ArticleDOI
14 Dec 1989-Nature
TL;DR: The specialized sets of genes that determine different cell types in yeast are controlled by combinations of DNA-binding proteins some of which are present only in certain cell types whereas others are present in all cell types.
Abstract: The specialized sets of genes that determine different cell types in yeast are controlled by combinations of DNA-binding proteins some of which are present only in certain cell types whereas others are present in all cell types. Final differentiation requires an inductive signal that triggers both gene transcription and cell-cycle arrest. Synthesis of the proteins coded by the 'master regulatory' mating-type locus is regulated so as to generate a heterogeneous mitotic cell population containing a stem-cell lineage.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that commitment of a cell to a particular pathway of differentiation (assayed by cell-type-specific expression of intermediate filament proteins) usually occurs prior to the time that lamin A/C can be detected, and may serve as a limit on the plasticity of cells for further developmental events.
Abstract: In mouse embryos, acquisition of the nuclear lamin polypeptides A/C varies according to developmental stage and tissue type. In order to determine the precise time points and cell types in which lamin A/C are first observed, we have used two monoclonal antibodies in immunofluorescence studies of different tissues of developing mouse embryos and of young mice. One antibody (mAB346) is specific for lamins A and C, while the other (PKB8) detects lamins A, B and C. Dividing uterine development into three phases--germ layer formation, organogenesis and tissue differentiation--our results show that lamin A/C expression in the embryo proper is not observed until the third phase of development. Lamin A/C first appears at embryonic day 12 in muscle cells of the trunk, head and the appendages. Three days later it is also seen in cells of the epidermis where its appearance coincides with the time of stratification. In the simple epithelial of lung, liver, kidney and intestine, as well as in heart and brain, lamins A/C do not appear until well after birth. Embryonal carcinoma (EC) cells express lamin B but not lamin A/C. Lamin A/C expression is noted in some EC cells after they are induced to differentiate and in several differentiated teratocarcinoma cell lines. Our results suggest that commitment of a cell to a particular pathway of differentiation (assayed by cell-type-specific expression of intermediate filament proteins) usually occurs prior to the time that lamin A/C can be detected. Thus lamin A/C expression may serve as a limit on the plasticity of cells for further developmental events.

Journal ArticleDOI
09 Nov 1989-Nature
TL;DR: It is found that the human Nm23 protein has sequence homology over the entire translated region with a recently described developmentally regulated protein in Drosophila, encoded by the abnormal wing discs (awd) 6–8 gene.
Abstract: Tumour metastasis is the principal cause of death for cancer patients. We have identified the nm23 gene, for which RNA levels are reduced in tumour cells of high metastatic potential. In this report we identify the cytoplasmic and nuclear Nm23 protein, and show that it also is differentially expressed in metastatic tumour cells. We also find that the human Nm23 protein has sequence homology over the entire translated region with a recently described developmentally regulated protein in Drosophila, encoded by the abnormal wing discs (awd) gene. Mutations in awd cause abnormal tissue morphology and necrosis and widespread aberrant differentiation in Drosophila, analogous to changes in malignant progression. The metastatic state may therefore be determined by the loss of genes such as nm23/awd which normally regulate development.

Journal Article
TL;DR: The presence of and phenotypic interconversion (transdifferentiation) between two morphologically and biochemically distinct cell types is suggestive of a multipotent embryonal precursor cell of the neural crest.
Abstract: Previous studies of the human neuroblastoma cell line SK-N-SH had demonstrated the presence of and phenotypic interconversion (transdifferentiation) between two morphologically and biochemically distinct cell types: N (neuroblastic) cells with properties of noradrenergic neurons and S (substrate-adherent) cells with properties of melanocytes. Current studies have sought to test the generality of these findings among other cultured human neuroblastoma cell lines and to define further the S-cell phenotype and that of a newly identified, morphologically intermediate, I-type cell. Morphologically homogeneous populations (clonal sublines or subpopulations) of N, S, and I cells were isolated from five additional neuroblastoma cell lines and analyzed biochemically for neuronal, glial, and melanocytic marker enzyme activities and norepinephrine uptake. Immunoblot techniques were used to detect intermediate filament proteins (neurofilament protein, vimentin, glial fibrillary acidic protein) and fibronectin. All N-type cells exhibited neuronal marker enzyme activities, specific uptake of norepinephrine, and presence of one or more neurofilament proteins. S-type cells generally lacked neuronal characteristics but contained, instead, tyrosinase activity (a melanocytic marker enzyme), vimentin, and fibronectin. This combination of attributes is suggestive of a multipotent embryonal precursor cell of the neural crest. I-type cells differentially expressed both S- and N-cell properties and could represent either a stem cell or an intermediate in the transdifferentiation process. Studies of the biological significance of human neuroblastoma cell transdifferentiation and the molecular mechanisms underlying this process may be of relevance to the biological and clinical behavior of this tumor in the patient.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the expression of each of the two forms of TGF‐β is independently regulated, and sensitive and specific immunological assays for TGF •β1 and •β2 in complex biological fluids are described.
Abstract: Transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta), a potent modulator of cell growth, differentiation, and the expression of extracellular matrix components in a variety of cell types, exists as two distinct homodimers (TGF-beta 1 and TGF-beta 2), sharing 71% sequence homology. Radioreceptor and previously described radioimmunological assays using rabbit antibodies have not been able to distinguish between these two forms. We have developed antisera in turkeys against native TGF-beta 1 and TGF-beta 2, each of which specifically blocks both the receptor binding and biological activity of each of these peptides. With these immunological reagents we describe sensitive and specific immunological assays for TGF-beta 1 and TGF-beta 2 in complex biological fluids. Using these assays we show that both TGF-beta 1 and TGF-beta 2 are secreted by a variety of cultured cells, but that some cells secrete predominantly either TGF-beta 1 or TGF-beta 2 while others secrete both peptides in nearly equal amounts. Our results demonstrate that the expression of each of the two forms of TGF-beta is independently regulated.

Journal ArticleDOI
Sally Temple1
10 Aug 1989-Nature
TL;DR: A culture system in which blast cells isolated from embryonic day 13.5–14.5 rat forebrain can divide and differentiate into a variety of clonal types, including neurons or glia and non-neuronal cells is described.
Abstract: The mechanism of transformation of the overtly similar cells of the neural plate into the numerous and diverse cell types of the mature vertebrate central nervous system (CNS) can better be understood by studying the clonal development of isolated CNS precursor cells. Here I describe a culture system in which blast cells (cells capable of division) isolated from embryonic day 13.5-14.5 rat forebrain can divide and differentiate into a variety of clonal types. Most clones contain only neurons or glia; 22% contain both neurons and non-neuronal cells. For the division of blast cells, live conditioning cells need to be present indicating that environmental signals influence proliferation. Heterogeneous clones develop in homogeneous culture conditions, so factors intrinsic to the blast cells are probably important in determining the number and type of clonal progeny.