Search results for "Growth factor"

showing 10 items of 1300 documents

TGF-beta as a T cell regulator in colitis and colon cancer

2005

TGF-beta is a pleiotropic cytokine with powerful immunosuppressive functions. Mice deficient for TGF-beta1 show a dramatic phenotype with severe multiorgan inflammation and die shortly after birth. Recent investigations have highlighted the role of TGF-beta in suppression of T cell mediated autoimmune inflammation and anti-tumor immunity. In addition to its direct anti-inflammatory effects on T cells, TGF-beta has been implicated as central regulator of regulatory T cells. TGF-beta not only mediates the suppression of effector T cells by Tregs, recent evidence also reveals a role for TGF-beta along with TCR stimulation in the peripheral induction of regulatory T cells from naïve CD4+CD25- c…

Endocrinology Diabetes and MetabolismT cellImmunologyBiologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyTCIRG1Interleukin 21T-Lymphocyte SubsetsTransforming Growth Factor betamedicineAnimalsHumansImmunology and AllergyCytotoxic T cellIL-2 receptorIntestinal MucosaAntigen-presenting cellZAP70Cell DifferentiationColitisNatural killer T cellDisease Models Animalmedicine.anatomical_structureColonic NeoplasmsImmunologyInflammation MediatorsCytokine & Growth Factor Reviews
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A combined approach for gene discovery identifies insulin-like growth factor-binding protein-related protein 1 as a new gene implicated in human endo…

2003

In the past, human endometrial receptivity has been investigated by chasing specific molecules throughout the menstrual cycle. Now the genomic approach allows us to investigate the hierarchical contribution of a high number of genes to a specific function. In this study, we analyzed differentially the gene expression pattern of 375 human cytokines, chemokines, and related factors, plus that of their receptors, in endometrial receptivity. To do this, we used a combined approach of human endometrium and cell lines. We have compared the gene expression pattern in receptive vs. prereceptive human endometria and contrasted the results with gene expression in the highly adhesive cell line (to JAR…

Endocrinology Diabetes and Metabolismmedicine.medical_treatmentClinical BiochemistryBiologyEndometriumBiochemistryInsulin-like growth factor-binding proteinCell LineEndometriumMiceEndocrinologyPregnancyGene expressionmedicineCell AdhesionAnimalsHumansRNA MessengerReceptorGeneIn Situ HybridizationMenstrual CycleFluorescent DyesMessenger RNAReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionBiochemistry (medical)Epithelial CellsMolecular biologyImmunohistochemistryInsulin-Like Growth Factor Binding ProteinsCytokinemedicine.anatomical_structureBlastocystGene Expression RegulationCell culturebiology.proteinFemaleStromal CellsCarrier ProteinsThe Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism
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Unjamming overcomes kinetic and proliferation arrest in terminally differentiated cells and promotes collective motility of carcinoma.

2019

During wound repair, branching morphogenesis and carcinoma dissemination, cellular rearrangements are fostered by a solid-to-liquid transition, known as unjamming. The biomolecular machinery behind unjamming and its pathophysiological relevance remain, however, unclear. Here, we study unjamming in a variety of normal and tumorigenic epithelial two-dimensional (2D) and 3D collectives. Biologically, the increased level of the small GTPase RAB5A sparks unjamming by promoting non-clathrin-dependent internalization of epidermal growth factor receptor that leads to hyperactivation of the kinase ERK1/2 and phosphorylation of the actin nucleator WAVE2. This cascade triggers collective motility effe…

EndosomeCellular differentiationmedia_common.quotation_subjectMotility02 engineering and technologySettore MED/08 - Anatomia Patologica010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesExtracellular matrixCell MovementCell Line TumorHumansGeneral Materials ScienceSmall GTPaseEpidermal growth factor receptorInternalizationActinmedia_commonCell Proliferationrab5 GTP-Binding ProteinsMitogen-Activated Protein Kinase 1Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase 3biologyChemistryMechanical EngineeringCell DifferentiationGeneral Chemistry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyCondensed Matter Physics0104 chemical sciencesCell biologyErbB ReceptorsKineticscarcinoma differentiated neoplastic cellsMechanics of Materialsbiology.protein0210 nano-technologyNature materials
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γ2-Adaptin, a Ubiquitin-interacting Adaptor, Is a Substrate to Coupled Ubiquitination by the Ubiquitin Ligase Nedd4 and Functions in the Endosomal Pa…

2008

gamma2-Adaptin is a putative member of the clathrin adaptor protein family with unknown physiological function. We previously reported that gamma2-adaptin acts as a ubiquitin receptor by virtue of its ubiquitin-interacting motif. Here we demonstrate that this motif mediates a specific physical interaction with the ubiquitin ligase Nedd4 and promotes ubiquitination of gamma2-adaptin. By mapping regions of Nedd4 involved in binding to gamma2-adaptin, we identified its C2 domain to be essential, whereas the WW and HECT domains are dispensable. Consistent with this, we uncovered that the C2 domain of Nedd4 is ubiquitinated itself and as such is recruited by the ubiquitin-interacting motif of ga…

EndosomeNedd4 Ubiquitin Protein LigasesUbiquitin-Protein LigasesAmino Acid MotifsNEDD4Endosomesmacromolecular substancesUbiquitin-conjugating enzymeBiochemistryClathrinSubstrate SpecificityUbiquitinCell Line TumorHumansAdaptor Protein Complex gamma SubunitsMolecular BiologyC2 domainEndosomal Sorting Complexes Required for TransportEpidermal Growth FactorbiologyUbiquitinCell MembraneUbiquitinationSignal transducing adaptor proteinCell BiologyUbiquitin ligaseCell biologybiology.proteinProtein BindingJournal of Biological Chemistry
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Subtype-specific endothelin-A and endothelin-B receptor desensitization correlates with differential receptor phosphorylation.

1998

In the rat cardiovascular system endothelin-1 (ET-1) elicits prolonged physiologic responses mediated by the ET A receptor, whereas the effects mediated by the ET B receptor are transient. The molecular mechanisms for the subtype-specific responses are not yet clear. However, post-translational modifications such as phosphorylation and palmitoylation may play an important role. In Sf9 cells overexpressing the human ET A and ET B receptors, both subtypes are palmitoylated. However, only the ET B but not the ET A receptor is phosphorylated in a ligand-dependent manner. Because phosphorylation is believed to play an important role in ligand-dependent receptor inactivation, we analyzed whether …

Endothelin Receptor Antagonistsmedicine.medical_specialtyTropomyosin receptor kinase BCHO CellsBiologyEstrogen-related receptor alphaInternal medicineCricetinaemedicineEnzyme-linked receptorAnimalsHumansCloning MolecularPhosphorylationReceptorProtease-activated receptor 2Insulin-like growth factor 1 receptorPharmacologyReceptors EndothelinInterleukin-13 receptorReceptor Endothelin AReceptor Endothelin BCell biologyRatsInterleukin 10KineticsEndocrinologyCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicineSignal TransductionJournal of cardiovascular pharmacology
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Lactate adversely affects the in vitro formation of endothelial cell tubular structures through the action of TGF-beta1.

2006

When lactate accumulation in a tumor microenvironment reaches an average concentration of 10-20 mM, it tends to reflect a high degree of malignancy. However, the hypothesis that tumor-derived lactate has a number of partially adverse biological effects on malignant and tumor-associated host cells requires further evidence. The present study attempted to evaluate the impact of lactate on the process of angiogenesis, in particular on the formation of tubular structures. The endothelial cell (EC) network in desmoplastic breast tumors is primarily located in areas of reactive fibroblastic stroma. We employed a fibroblast-endothelial cell co-culture model as in vitro angiogenesis system normally…

EndotheliumAngiogenesisCell SurvivalCellPopulationNeovascularization PhysiologicBiologyTransforming Growth Factor beta1Cell MovementNeutralization TestsmedicineHumansLactic AcidRNA MessengerFibroblasteducationCell ProliferationTumor microenvironmenteducation.field_of_studyCell growthEndothelial CellsCell BiologyFibroblastsActinsCoculture TechniquesCell biologyEndothelial stem cellmedicine.anatomical_structureGene Expression RegulationImmunologyExperimental cell research
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Tumour vascularization via endothelial differentiation of glioblastoma stem-like cells

2010

Glioblastoma is a highly angiogenetic malignancy, the neoformed vessels of which are thought to arise by sprouting of pre-existing brain capillaries. The recent demonstration that a population of glioblastoma stem-like cells (GSCs) maintains glioblastomas indicates that the progeny of these cells may not be confined to the neural lineage. Normal neural stem cells are able to differentiate into functional endothelial cells. The connection between neural stem cells and the endothelial compartment seems to be critical in glioblastoma, where cancer stem cells closely interact with the vascular niche and promote angiogenesis through the release of vascular endothelial growth factor(VEGF) and str…

EndotheliumAngiogenesisTransplantation HeterologousSettore MED/27 - NEUROCHIRURGIAMice TransgenicMice SCIDBiologyModels BiologicalMiceVasculogenesisNeural Stem CellsMice Inbred NODCell Line TumormedicineAnimalsHumansCell LineageVasculogenic mimicryglioblastoma tumor vascularizationIn Situ Hybridization FluorescenceChromosome AberrationsMultidisciplinaryNeovascularization PathologicEndothelial CellsCell DifferentiationVascular endothelial growth factor BEndothelial stem cellVascular endothelial growth factor Amedicine.anatomical_structureVascular endothelial growth factor CTumor Markers BiologicalImmunologyCancer researchEndothelium VascularGlioblastomaNeoplasm TransplantationNature
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Activation of gp 130 by IL-6/soluble IL-6 receptor induces neuronal differentiation

1998

Interleukin-6 (IL-6) on target cells binds to the specific IL-6 receptor (IL-6R) and subsequently induces homodimerization of the signal-transducing protein gp130. Cells which express gp130 but no IL-6R and which therefore do not respond to IL-6 can be stimulated by the complex of IL-6 and soluble IL-6R (slL-6R). Here we show that on rat pheochromocytoma cells (PC12), the combination of IL-6 and slL-6R but not IL-6 alone induces expression of c-fos, GAP-43 and neuron-specific enolase followed by neuron-specific differentiation and formation of a neuronal network. The differentiation was dose-and time-dependent and followed the same kinetics as nerve-growth factor (NGF)-induced differentiati…

EnolaseGene ExpressionBiologyBinding CompetitivePC12 CellsAntibodiesGAP-43 ProteinAntigens CDNeutralization TestsCytokine Receptor gp130NeuritesAnimalsHumansNerve Growth FactorsReceptorNeuronsMessenger RNAMembrane GlycoproteinsInterleukin-6General NeuroscienceCell DifferentiationGlycoprotein 130Receptors Interleukin-6Molecular biologyRecombinant ProteinsRatsCell biologySolubilitynervous systemTrk receptorInterleukin-6 receptorSignal transductionProto-Oncogene Proteins c-fosTyrosine kinaseEuropean Journal of Neuroscience
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Angiogenesis, immune system and growth factors: new targets in colorectal cancer therapy.

2005

Colorectal cancer is the second most common malignant human neoplasia. Over recent years, many efforts have been performed in order to develop and improve therapeutic protocols, and many advances have been accomplished in both the field of adjuvant and palliative therapy. Most of the chemotherapic agents currently used in the clinical setting are the products of decades of research aimed at inhibiting the uncontrolled growth of dysplastic cells. However, new frontiers in this field have recently been opened, with the identification of key molecules involved in physiologic mechanisms that are of fundamental importance for cancer development and progression. Tumor-induced angiogenesis, the ca…

Epidermal Growth FactorNeovascularization PathologicAngiogenesisbusiness.industryColorectal cancerGrowth factormedicine.medical_treatmentAngiogenesis Inhibitorsmedicine.diseasePalliative TherapyNeovascularizationImmune systemCytokineOncologyImmune SystemImmunologymedicineCancer researchHumansPharmacology (medical)medicine.symptombusinessColorectal NeoplasmsAdjuvantSignal TransductionExpert review of anticancer therapy
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Structural Basis of Tumoral Angiogenesis

2003

Mammalian cells require oxygen and nutrients for metabolism and growth. In all cases tissues possess a vascular and lymphatic network assuring the supply of these needs within 200 to 250µm. Multicellular organisms that grow beyond this size require the recruitment of new blood vessels, although some normal tissues are devoid of specific vascularization (cartilage, cornea, epidermis), obtaining their oxygen and metabolic supply through perfusion

Epidermis (botany)AngiogenesisCartilagegovernment.form_of_governmentBiologyCell biologyVascular endothelial growth factorchemistry.chemical_compoundLymphatic EndotheliumMulticellular organismmedicine.anatomical_structureLymphatic systemchemistrymedicinegovernmentVasculogenic mimicry
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