Spelling suggestions: "subject:"neurite outgrowth"" "subject:"meurite outgrowth""
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Multiple roles for retinoic acid in the development of the chick nervous systemGale, Emily Anne January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
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Structure of the human N-cadherin geneWallis, Julia Ann January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
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Ultra Low Concentrations of Morphine Increase Neurite Outgrowth in Cultured Rat Spinal Cord and Cerebral Cortical NeuronsBrailoiu, Eugen, Hoard, Jennifer, Brailoiu, G. Cristina, Chi, Michelle, Godbolde, Ramona, Dun, Nae J. 15 July 2004 (has links)
The present study was undertaken to evaluate the effects of ultra low concentrations (10-9 or 10-14 M) of morphine on neurite elongation in cultured neurons dissociated from rat spinal cords and cerebral cortex. In fetal serum (FS) or fetal serum-free supplemented with cAMP media, the length of longest neurite was significantly increased by 10-9 or 10-14 M morphine. For example, 10-14 M morphine increased neurite length by 24±0.5% and 27±0.3% in spinal cord neurons, and 18±0.2% and 17±0.6% in cortical neurons. Morphine (10-6 M) had no significant effect on neurite length of spinal and cortical neurons. The relative frequency distribution of neurite length revealed 61±2.7% of spinal neurons and 48±2.6% of cortical neurons are responsive to ultra low concentrations of morphine. In the responsive populations, morphine (10 -14 M) enhanced the neurite outgrowth in spinal neurons by 58±0.9% and 48±1.2% and in cortical neurons by 31±0.6% and 28±0.9% in FS and cAMP-supplemented media, respectively. Pretreatment with naloxone did not prevent the morphine effect. The result shows that morphine at ultra low concentrations enhances neurite outgrowth of spinal and cortical neurons via a naloxone-independent mechanism.
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THE IMPORTANCE OF SUBCELLULAR LOCALIZATION OF CA2+/CALMODULIN DEPENDENT PROTEIN KINASE II IN NEURONAL DIFFERENTIATIONKUTCHER, LOUIS WM. III 17 April 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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Total synthesis of (±)-Merrilactone A and (±)-Anislactone AShi, Lei January 2011 (has links)
Merrilactone A (1) was isolated in only 0.004% yield from the methanol extracts of the pericarps of Illicium merrillianum. Structural elucidation of Merrilactone A revealed a compact, cage-like pentacyclic architecture of high molecular complexity, featuring seven stereocentres, five of which as contiguous fully substituted carbon atoms, two γ-lactones and a central oxetane ring. Merrilactone A also exhibits an important neurotrophic activity, significantly promoting neurite outgrowth in the primary cultures of foetal rat cortical neurons at very low concentrations. Structurally, merrilactone A is related to anislactones A and B, a pair of epimeric sesquiterpene dilactones discovered ten years earlier by Kouno and co-workers from the related Illicium anisatum plant. Fukuyama has shown that anislactone B can be converted into merrilactone A using a simple three step sequence, suggesting that the anislactones may be biogenetic precursors to merrilactone A. Described in this thesis are our research efforts directed towards developing a conceptually novel synthetic route enabling regiodivergent total synthesis of both anislactone A / B and merrilactone A. Our synthetic route (around 22 steps) features several key reactions, which include a [2+2] photo-cycloaddition reaction, Tiffeneau-Demjanov ring expansion and titanium(III) mediated radical cyclization.
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Role of eEF1A isoforms in neuritogenesis and epilepsyDavies, Faith Cathryn Joy January 2017 (has links)
Eukaryotic Elongation Factor 1A (eEF1A) exists in two forms in vertebrates. The first form, eEF1A1, is expressed ubiquitously throughout development but is downregulated postdevelopmentally and replaced with eEF1A2, an isoform sharing 92% amino acid identity, in neurons and muscle. The primary function of eEF1A is to recruit amino-acylated tRNAs in a GTP-dependent manner to the A site of the ribosome during protein translation, but it also has non-canonical roles in the cell, some of which are isoform dependent. The reasons for the cell-type dependent switch from eEF1A1 to eEF1A2 are poorly understood. The first aim of this project was to examine the role played by eEF1A isoforms in neuritogenesis. To do this I used RNAi to significantly reduce expression of one or other isoform in neuronal cells and measure the effects this had on neurite outgrowth. Neurite outgrowth was significantly reduced in cells depleted of eEF1A1, but not eEF1A2. The complete loss of eEF1A2 is fatal, as has been demonstrated in the wasted mouse, an eEF1A2-null model characterised by muscle wastage, neurodegeneration and death at 4 weeks of age. Mice heterozygous for the wasted mutation have normal motor function. Recent work has found that heterozygous missense mutations in eEF1A2 can cause epilepsy and intellectual disability. It is not yet known whether the seven different de novo mutations identified to date confer loss or gain of function – a crucial piece of information required before possible treatments can be sought. The second aim of this project therefore was to investigate the role of eEF1A2 in epilepsy and intellectual disability. I achieved this by using CRISPR in two ways; firstly to model one of the mutations, D252H, in vitro in a neuronal cell line, and secondly to model another of the mutations, G70S, in vivo. No mice that recapitulated the human disease condition of EEF1A2G70S/+ were obtained however, due to the error-prone nature of the non-homologous end joining repair pathway activated by CRISPR-mediated DNA cleavage, 17 of the 35 mice born were found to be homozygous nulls at the Eef1a2 locus. Nine of these had fatal audiogenic seizures caused by sudden loud noises within the animal unit. Three mice were Eef1a2G70S/- and one Eef1a2G70S/G70S but these nonetheless showed a wasted phenotype, indicating that this mutant form of eEF1A2 has compromised function, at least in terms of translation elongation. Whether it has a toxic function ca not yet be known, but the severity of the phenotype in the G70S homozygous animal could suggest a gain of function. In in vitro experiments with exogenous eEF1A2 carrying the epilepsy-causing mutation R423C, protein expression of the mutant construct in immortalised cell lines was significantly higher when cotransfected with the wildtype construct, which mirrors the condition in humans, than when transfected alone, so the mutant protein could be stabilised in the presence of wildtype eEF1A2. I used CRISPR on LUHMES cells to make a mutant neuronal cell line containing the D252H mutation in eEF1A2. Due to time restraints no phenotypic differences between the wild type line and the D252H mutation line have yet been identified, but would form the focus of a future project.
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The Na⁺/H⁺ exchanger NHE1 plays a permissive role in regulating early neurite morphogenesisMoniz, David Matthew 05 1900 (has links)
The ubiquitously expressed plasma membrane Na⁺/H⁺ exchanger isoform 1 (NHE1) plays an important role in directed cell migration in non-neuronal cells, an effect which requires both the ion translocation and actin cytoskeleton anchoring functions of the protein. In the present study, an analogous role for NHE1 as a modulator of neurite outgrowth was evaluated in vitro utilizing NGF-differentiated PC12 cells as well as mouse neocortical neurons in primary culture. Examined at 3 d.i.v., endogenous NHE1 was found to be expressed in growth cones, where it gave rise to an elevated intracellular pH in actively-extending neurites. Application of the NHE inhibitor cariporide at an NHE1-selective concentration (1 μM) resulted in reductions in neurite extension and elaboration while application of 100 μM cariporide, to inhibit all known plasmalemmal NHE isoforms, failed to exert additional inhibitory effects, suggesting a dominant role for the NHE1 isoform in modulating neurite outgrowth. In addition, whereas transient overexpression of full-length NHE1 enhanced neurite outgrowth in a cariporide-sensitive manner in both NGF-differentiated PC12 cells and WT neocortical neurons, neurite outgrowth was reduced in NGF-differentiated PC12 cells overexpressing NHE1 mutants deficient in either ion translocation activity or actin cytoskeleton anchoring, suggesting that both functional domains of NHE1 are important for modulating neurite elaboration. A role for NHE1 in modulating neurite outgrowth was confirmed in neocortical neurons obtained from NHE1-/- mice which displayed reduced neurite outgrowth when compared to neurons obtained from their NHE1⁺/⁺ littermates. Further, neurite outgrowth in NHE1-/- neurons was rescued by transient overexpression of full-length NHE1 but not with mutant NHE1 constructs again suggesting that both functional domains of NHE1 are important for modulating neurite outgrowth. Finally, the growth promoting effects of netrin-1 but not BDNF or IGF-1 were abolished by cariporide in WT neocortical neurons and while both BDNF and IGF-1 were able to promote neurite outgrowth in NHE1-/- neurons, netrin-1 was unable to elicit this effect. Taken together, these results indicate that NHE1 is a permissive regulator of early neurite morphogenesis and also plays a novel role in netrin-1-stimulated neurite outgrowth.
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The Na⁺/H⁺ exchanger NHE1 plays a permissive role in regulating early neurite morphogenesisMoniz, David Matthew 05 1900 (has links)
The ubiquitously expressed plasma membrane Na⁺/H⁺ exchanger isoform 1 (NHE1) plays an important role in directed cell migration in non-neuronal cells, an effect which requires both the ion translocation and actin cytoskeleton anchoring functions of the protein. In the present study, an analogous role for NHE1 as a modulator of neurite outgrowth was evaluated in vitro utilizing NGF-differentiated PC12 cells as well as mouse neocortical neurons in primary culture. Examined at 3 d.i.v., endogenous NHE1 was found to be expressed in growth cones, where it gave rise to an elevated intracellular pH in actively-extending neurites. Application of the NHE inhibitor cariporide at an NHE1-selective concentration (1 μM) resulted in reductions in neurite extension and elaboration while application of 100 μM cariporide, to inhibit all known plasmalemmal NHE isoforms, failed to exert additional inhibitory effects, suggesting a dominant role for the NHE1 isoform in modulating neurite outgrowth. In addition, whereas transient overexpression of full-length NHE1 enhanced neurite outgrowth in a cariporide-sensitive manner in both NGF-differentiated PC12 cells and WT neocortical neurons, neurite outgrowth was reduced in NGF-differentiated PC12 cells overexpressing NHE1 mutants deficient in either ion translocation activity or actin cytoskeleton anchoring, suggesting that both functional domains of NHE1 are important for modulating neurite elaboration. A role for NHE1 in modulating neurite outgrowth was confirmed in neocortical neurons obtained from NHE1-/- mice which displayed reduced neurite outgrowth when compared to neurons obtained from their NHE1⁺/⁺ littermates. Further, neurite outgrowth in NHE1-/- neurons was rescued by transient overexpression of full-length NHE1 but not with mutant NHE1 constructs again suggesting that both functional domains of NHE1 are important for modulating neurite outgrowth. Finally, the growth promoting effects of netrin-1 but not BDNF or IGF-1 were abolished by cariporide in WT neocortical neurons and while both BDNF and IGF-1 were able to promote neurite outgrowth in NHE1-/- neurons, netrin-1 was unable to elicit this effect. Taken together, these results indicate that NHE1 is a permissive regulator of early neurite morphogenesis and also plays a novel role in netrin-1-stimulated neurite outgrowth.
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The role of Tm5NM1/2 on early neuritogenesisChan, Yee-Ka Agnes January 2009 (has links)
Master of Philosophy (Medicine) / The actin cytoskeleton is important in many cellular processes such as motility, and establishing and maintaining cell morphology. Members of the tropomyosin protein family associate with the actin cytoskeleton along the major groove of actin filaments (F-actin), stabilising them and regulating actin-filament dynamics. To date over 40 non-muscle tropomyosin isoforms have been identified, which are encoded by 4 different genes (α, β, γ, δ). Individual tropomyosin isoforms define functionally distinct F-actin populations. Previous studies have shown that tropomyosins sort to distinct subcellular compartments at different stages of development in polarised cells. Neuronal growth cones are highly dynamic polarised structures, dependent on a constant reorganisation of the actin cytoskeleton. By eliminating tropomyosins in a knockout (KO) mouse model, we investigated the role of two tropomyosin isoforms, Tm5NM1 and Tm5NM2 (γTm gene products) in growth cone dynamics and neurite outgrowth. Growth cone protrusion rates were significantly increased in one day old Tm5NM1/2 KO hippocampal neurons compared to WT controls. Neuritogenesis was significantly affected by the elimination of Tm5NM1/2, with a slight decrease in neurite length and an increase in neuronal branching in neurons cultured for four days. At the molecular level, the depletion of Tm5NM1/2 had no impact on the protein levels and activity of ADF/cofilin in hippocampal neurons while in cortical neurons a subtle but significant increase in ADF/cofilin activity was observed. The subtle phenotype in the early stages of neuritogenesis observed from eliminating Tm5NM1/2 may be explained with functional compensation by other tropomyosin isoforms. Functional compensation for the loss of Tm5NM1/2 may be provided by isoforms Tm5a/5b, TmBr2 and Tm4 as they localise to the growth cones, structures where Tm5NM1/2 are normally found. These results suggest that Tm5NM1/2 may not be required for early stages of neuritogenesis but may still play a fine-tuning role for this process.
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The role of Tm5NM1/2 on early neuritogenesisChan, Yee-Ka Agnes January 2009 (has links)
Master of Philosophy (Medicine) / The actin cytoskeleton is important in many cellular processes such as motility, and establishing and maintaining cell morphology. Members of the tropomyosin protein family associate with the actin cytoskeleton along the major groove of actin filaments (F-actin), stabilising them and regulating actin-filament dynamics. To date over 40 non-muscle tropomyosin isoforms have been identified, which are encoded by 4 different genes (α, β, γ, δ). Individual tropomyosin isoforms define functionally distinct F-actin populations. Previous studies have shown that tropomyosins sort to distinct subcellular compartments at different stages of development in polarised cells. Neuronal growth cones are highly dynamic polarised structures, dependent on a constant reorganisation of the actin cytoskeleton. By eliminating tropomyosins in a knockout (KO) mouse model, we investigated the role of two tropomyosin isoforms, Tm5NM1 and Tm5NM2 (γTm gene products) in growth cone dynamics and neurite outgrowth. Growth cone protrusion rates were significantly increased in one day old Tm5NM1/2 KO hippocampal neurons compared to WT controls. Neuritogenesis was significantly affected by the elimination of Tm5NM1/2, with a slight decrease in neurite length and an increase in neuronal branching in neurons cultured for four days. At the molecular level, the depletion of Tm5NM1/2 had no impact on the protein levels and activity of ADF/cofilin in hippocampal neurons while in cortical neurons a subtle but significant increase in ADF/cofilin activity was observed. The subtle phenotype in the early stages of neuritogenesis observed from eliminating Tm5NM1/2 may be explained with functional compensation by other tropomyosin isoforms. Functional compensation for the loss of Tm5NM1/2 may be provided by isoforms Tm5a/5b, TmBr2 and Tm4 as they localise to the growth cones, structures where Tm5NM1/2 are normally found. These results suggest that Tm5NM1/2 may not be required for early stages of neuritogenesis but may still play a fine-tuning role for this process.
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