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Browsing by Subject "Calcium-binding proteins"
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Item Coordinating cardiomyocyte interactions to direct ventricular chamber morphogenesis(SpringerNature, 2016-06-30) Han, Peidong; Bloomekatz, Joshua; Ren, Jie; Zhang, Ruilin; Grinstein, Jonathan D.; Zhao, Long; Burns, C. Geoffrey; Burns, Caroline E.; Anderson, Ryan M.; Chi, Neil C.; Department of Pediatrics, IU School of MedicineMany organs are composed of complex tissue walls that are structurally organized to optimize organ function. In particular, the ventricular myocardial wall of the heart comprises an outer compact layer that concentrically encircles the ridge-like inner trabecular layer. Although disruption in the morphogenesis of this myocardial wall can lead to various forms of congenital heart disease and non-compaction cardiomyopathies, it remains unclear how embryonic cardiomyocytes assemble to form ventricular wall layers of appropriate spatial dimensions and myocardial mass. Here we use advanced genetic and imaging tools in zebrafish to reveal an interplay between myocardial Notch and Erbb2 signalling that directs the spatial allocation of myocardial cells to their proper morphological positions in the ventricular wall. Although previous studies have shown that endocardial Notch signalling non-cell-autonomously promotes myocardial trabeculation through Erbb2 and bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signalling, we discover that distinct ventricular cardiomyocyte clusters exhibit myocardial Notch activity that cell-autonomously inhibits Erbb2 signalling and prevents cardiomyocyte sprouting and trabeculation. Myocardial-specific Notch inactivation leads to ventricles of reduced size and increased wall thickness because of excessive trabeculae, whereas widespread myocardial Notch activity results in ventricles of increased size with a single-cell-thick wall but no trabeculae. Notably, this myocardial Notch signalling is activated non-cell-autonomously by neighbouring Erbb2-activated cardiomyocytes that sprout and form nascent trabeculae. Thus, these findings support an interactive cellular feedback process that guides the assembly of cardiomyocytes to morphologically create the ventricular myocardial wall and more broadly provide insight into the cellular dynamics of how diverse cell lineages organize to create form.Item Deleted in malignant brain tumor 1 genetic variation confers urinary tract infection risk in children and mice(Wiley, 2021-07) Hains, David S.; Polley, Shamik; Liang, Dong; Saxena, Vijay; Arregui, Samuel; Ketz, John; Barr-Beare, Evan; Rawson, Ashley; Spencer, John D.; Cohen, Ariel; Hansen, Pernille L.; Tuttolomondo, Martina; Casella, Cinzia; Ditzel, Henrik J.; Cohen, Daniel; Hollox, Edward J.; Schwaderer, Andrew L.; Pediatrics, School of MedicineItem Doc2b Protects β-Cells Against Inflammatory Damage and Enhances Function(American Diabetes Association, 2018-07) Aslamy, Arianne; Oh, Eunjin; Olson, Erika M.; Zhang, Jing; Ahn, Miwon; Moin, Abu Saleh Md; Tunduguru, Ragadeepthi; Salunkhe, Vishal A.; Veluthakal, Rajakrishnan; Thurmond, Debbie C.; Cellular & Integrative Physiology, IU School of MedicineLoss of functional β-cell mass is an early feature of type 1 diabetes. To release insulin, β-cells require soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attachment protein receptor (SNARE) complexes, as well as SNARE complex regulatory proteins like double C2 domain-containing protein β (Doc2b). We hypothesized that Doc2b deficiency or overabundance may confer susceptibility or protection, respectively, to the functional β-cell mass. Indeed, Doc2b+/- knockout mice show an unusually severe response to multiple-low-dose streptozotocin (MLD-STZ), resulting in more apoptotic β-cells and a smaller β-cell mass. In addition, inducible β-cell-specific Doc2b-overexpressing transgenic (βDoc2b-dTg) mice show improved glucose tolerance and resist MLD-STZ-induced disruption of glucose tolerance, fasting hyperglycemia, β-cell apoptosis, and loss of β-cell mass. Mechanistically, Doc2b enrichment enhances glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) and SNARE activation and prevents the appearance of apoptotic markers in response to cytokine stress and thapsigargin. Furthermore, expression of a peptide containing the Doc2b tandem C2A and C2B domains is sufficient to confer the beneficial effects of Doc2b enrichment on GSIS, SNARE activation, and apoptosis. These studies demonstrate that Doc2b enrichment in the β-cell protects against diabetogenic and proapoptotic stress. Furthermore, they identify a Doc2b peptide that confers the beneficial effects of Doc2b and may be a therapeutic candidate for protecting functional β-cell mass.Item Functional dissection of ERD14 phosphorylation-dependent calcium binding activity(2014-12-11) Chacha, Allen R.; Randall, Stephen Karl, 1953-; Watson, John; Kusmierczyk, AndrewDrought and cold conditions are among the major factors affecting plant growth and crop production globally. Dehydrins are group II late embryogenesis abundant (LEA) proteins characterized by a conserved K-region (EKKGIMDKIKEKLPG consensus sequence) that accumulate in many plants during drought, low temperature, and high salinity to confer stress tolerance. While it has been demonstrated that overexpression of dehydrins improves cold tolerance in various crop plants, the mechanism leading to cold tolerance is still unclear. Previous studies reported phosphorylation of AtERD14 dehydrin by casein kinase II (CKII) led to an increase in calcium binding activity. Mass spectroscopy analysis determined that the phosphorylation was localized to a poly-serine (S) region. To further characterize the S-region, GST fused ERD14 mutants were created via site-directed mutagenesis and deletion of either the amino or carboxyl ends of ERD14 via the QuickChange® Multi Site-Directed Mutagenesis Kit. Phosphorylation of purified mutant proteins by CKII was analyzed via gel shift and direct phosphorylation assays. The effect of phosphorylation on calcium binding activity was also analyzed. Results showed the serine (S) residue at position 83 was crucial to phosphorylation-dependent molecular mass shift and Ca2+-binding activities followed by the serine residue at position 85 in importance. Mutation of serines at positions 83, 84, and 85 completely eliminated the phosphorylation-dependent gel shift and calcium binding. Examination of truncation mutants determined the N-terminal was an important region for protein structure modification and phosphorylation ability leading to Ca2+ activation. Calcium binding activity of the truncated mutants indicated the calcium binding site was localized in the region between the S-region and the K-region near the C-terminal end. To characterize the acidic dehydrins contribution to cold tolerance in vivo, three single (erd10, erd14, cor47) knockouts (KOs) were characterized. Single KOs produced no cold sensitive phenotype indicating the need for multiple dehydrin KOs in Arabidopsis in order to potentially produce a cold sensitive phenotype.