Tetraspanins and Intercellular Interactions

2001 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 153-168 ◽  
Author(s):  
MARÍA YÁÑEZ-MÓ ◽  
MARÍA MITTELBRUNN ◽  
FRANCISCO SÁNCHEZ-MADRID
1971 ◽  
Vol 179 (1055) ◽  
pp. 139-156 ◽  

The tabby syndrome in the mouse (which is common to the sex-linked gene for tabby and autosomal genes for crinkled and downless) affects the coat, the sinus hairs, the teeth, many glands and some surface features like tail rings, plicae digitales and the papilla vallata of the tongue. All these structures develop by the downgrowth of solid epithelial buds into the underlying mesenchyme. Organs which arise by invagination (like the neural tube or the otic vesicles and certain glands) are not affected by the tabby syndrome. The rudiments of glands and sinus hairs are reduced in size, and if reduction goes beyond a critical point, stunted organs are formed or, more commonly, the rudiments regress altogether. The same is true for the teeth and apparently for the whole syndrome. Measurements show the same situation in Ta ♂♂(and Ta/Ta ♀♀) and in heterozygous Ta / + ♀♀. As in Ta ♂♂ and Ta/Ta ♀♀ there cannot be any doubt that a threshold mechanism is involved, there is no reason to assume that, in Ta / + ♀♀, the identical defects are derived clonally from ancestral cells in which the Xchromosome carrying the normal allele has been inactivated. Whereas the Ta / + phenotype does not give any evidence that the Ta locus is involved in X-chromosome inactivation, the possibility cannot be ruled out that, if inactivation should actually take place on the cellular level, the macroscopic phenotype could be the result of intercellular interactions along with the effects of threshold mechanisms.


2021 ◽  
Vol 67 (1) ◽  
pp. 34-41
Author(s):  
E.D. Khilazheva ◽  
A.V. Morgun ◽  
E.B. Boytsova ◽  
A.I. Mosiagina ◽  
A.N. Shuvaev ◽  
...  

In the central nervous system of mammals, there are specialized areas in which neurogenesis — neurogenic niches — is observed in the postnatal period. It is believed that astrocytes in the composition of neurogenic niches play a significant role in the regulation of neurogenesis, and therefore they are considered as a promising “target” for the possible control of neurogenesis, including the use of optogenetics. In the framework of this work, we formed an in vitro model of a neurogenic niche, consisting of cerebral endothelial cells, astrocytes and neurospheres. Astrocytes in the neurogenic niche model expressed canalorodopsin ChR2 and underwent photoactivation. The effect of photoactivated astrocytes on the expression profile of neurogenic niche cells was evaluated using immunocytochemical analysis methods. It was found that intact astrocytes in the composition of the neurogenic niche contribute to neuronal differentiation of stem cells, as well as the activation of astroglia expressing photosensitive proteins, changes the expression of molecules characterized by intercellular interactions of pools of resting and proliferating cells in the composition of the neurogenic niche with the participation of NAD+ (Cx43, CD38, CD157), lactate (MCT1). In particular, the registered changes reflect a violation of the paracrine intercellular interactions of two subpopulations of cells, one of which acts as a source of NAD+, and the second as a consumer of NAD+ to ensure the processes of intracellular signal transduction; a change in the mechanisms of lactate transport due to aberrant expression of the lactate transporter MCT1 in cells forming a pool of cells developing along the neuronal path of differentiation. In general, with photostimulation of niche astrocytes, the total proliferative activity increases mainly due to neural progenitor cells, but not neural stem cells. Thus, optogenetic activation of astrocytes can become a promising tool for controlling the activity of neurogenesis processes and the formation of a local proneurogenic microenvironment in an in vitro model of a neurogenic niche.


2020 ◽  
Vol 175 ◽  
pp. 03024
Author(s):  
Viktor Chmykhalo ◽  
Peter Zolotukhin ◽  
Viktor Pakhomov ◽  
Aleksey Prutskov ◽  
Sabina Khairullina ◽  
...  

Adequate biological models are a prerequisite to screening and development of probiotic drugs. In the present study, Caco-2 cell line is reviewed as a model for analyzing properties of probiotics. This cell culture possesses all the characteristics necessary for evaluating the effects of probiotic drugs on a wide range of both intracellular processes and intercellular interactions. Informativeness of Caco-2 cells is in the focus of the present review.


2020 ◽  
Vol 122 (7) ◽  
pp. 151625
Author(s):  
Marta Hałas-Wiśniewska ◽  
Magdalena Izdebska ◽  
Wioletta Zielińska ◽  
Alina Grzanka

2018 ◽  
Vol 15 (146) ◽  
pp. 20180406 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anton Kan ◽  
Ilenne Del Valle ◽  
Tim Rudge ◽  
Fernán Federici ◽  
Jim Haseloff

Dense bacterial communities, known as biofilms, can have functional spatial organization driven by self-organizing chemical and physical interactions between cells, and their environment. In this work, we investigated intercellular adhesion, a pervasive property of bacteria in biofilms, to identify effects on the internal structure of bacterial colonies. We expressed the self-recognizing ag43 adhesin protein in Escherichia coli to generate adhesion between cells, which caused aggregation in liquid culture and altered microcolony morphology on solid media. We combined the adhesive phenotype with an artificial colony patterning system based on plasmid segregation, which marked clonal lineage domains in colonies grown from single cells. Engineered E. coli were grown to colonies containing domains with varying adhesive properties, and investigated with microscopy, image processing and computational modelling techniques. We found that intercellular adhesion elongated the fractal-like boundary between cell lineages only when both domains within the colony were adhesive, by increasing the rotational motion during colony growth. Our work demonstrates that adhesive intercellular interactions can have significant effects on the spatial organization of bacterial populations, which can be exploited for biofilm engineering. Furthermore, our approach provides a robust platform to study the influence of intercellular interactions on spatial structure in bacterial populations.


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