scholarly journals Stimulation of hCG protein and mRNA in first trimester villous cytotrophoblast cells in vitro by glycodelin A

2005 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Udo Jeschke ◽  
Uwe Karsten ◽  
Toralf Reimer ◽  
Dagmar-Ulrike Richter ◽  
Claudia Bergemann ◽  
...  
2004 ◽  
Vol 272 (2) ◽  
pp. 151-159 ◽  
Author(s):  
U. Jeschke ◽  
D.-U. Richter ◽  
T. Reimer ◽  
C. Bergemann ◽  
V. Briese ◽  
...  

2005 ◽  
Vol 17 (9) ◽  
pp. 79
Author(s):  
A. Charles ◽  
S. Hisheh ◽  
D. W. R. Kam ◽  
A. M. Dharmarajan

Pro-apoptotic genes have a role in the differentiation process in the placenta leading to the fusion of cytotrophoblast cells to form the protective syncytiotrophoblast layer. The mechanisms of apoptosis in the human placenta are not clearly understood. However, a major placental apoptotic-signalling pathway is known to involve the caspases. Caspase-14 is the most recently discovered member of the caspase family members and has not previously been examined in the human placenta. The aim of the present study was to detect caspase-14 in the human placenta and study its role in apoptosis. Human placentae were collected from first trimester and term gestation. The study consisted of two parts. In the first part, first trimester and term placentae were assessed for caspase-14 by western blotting and mRNA analysis and localised with immunohistochemical studies. In the second part, apoptosis in first trimester placenta was inhibited in an in-vitro model of explant villi culture with superoxide dismutase (SOD) treatment and the genes assessed. The first study demonstrated caspase-14 to be a cytoplasmic protein localised in the cytotrophoblast cells, the mesenchyme and in the syncytiotrophoblast of the first trimester. In the term placenta, caspase-14 was expressed weakly in the syncytiotrophoblast. The immunostaining data suggest a higher expression of caspase-14 in the first trimester compared to the term placenta, and this observation was later confirmed by western blot analysis. Using the SOD in-vitro explant culture model, no significant difference in the caspase-14 protein levels were seen in either the SOD or control group. This novel study demonstrates for the first time that caspase-14 protein and mRNA are present in the human placenta. The function of caspase-14 in the human placenta is unclear.


2003 ◽  
Vol 268 (3) ◽  
pp. 162-167 ◽  
Author(s):  
Udo Jeschke ◽  
Dagmar-Ulrike Richter ◽  
Hermann Walzel ◽  
Claudia Bergemann ◽  
Ioannis Mylonas ◽  
...  

1989 ◽  
Vol 109 (2) ◽  
pp. 891-902 ◽  
Author(s):  
S J Fisher ◽  
T Y Cui ◽  
L Zhang ◽  
L Hartman ◽  
K Grahl ◽  
...  

Human fetal development depends on the embryo rapidly gaining access to the maternal circulation. The trophoblast cells that form the fetal portion of the human placenta have solved this problem by transiently exhibiting certain tumor-like properties. Thus, during early pregnancy fetal cytotrophoblast cells invade the uterus and its arterial network. This process peaks during the twelfth week of pregnancy and declines rapidly thereafter, suggesting that the highly specialized, invasive behavior of the cytotrophoblast cells is closely regulated. Since little is known about the actual mechanisms involved, we developed an isolation procedure for cytotrophoblasts from placentas of different gestational ages to study their adhesive and invasive properties in vitro. Cytotrophoblasts isolated from first, second, and third trimester human placentas were plated on the basement membrane-like extracellular matrix produced by the PF HR9 teratocarcinoma cell line. Cells from all trimesters expressed the calcium-dependent cell adhesion molecule cell-CAM 120/80 (E-cadherin) which, in the placenta, is specific for cytotrophoblasts. However, only the first trimester cytotrophoblast cells degraded the matrices on which they were cultured, leaving large gaps in the basement membrane substrates and releasing low molecular mass 3H-labeled matrix components into the medium. No similar degradative activity was observed when second or third trimester cytotrophoblast cells, first trimester human placental fibroblasts, or the human choriocarcinoma cell lines BeWo and JAR were cultured on radiolabeled matrices. To begin to understand the biochemical basis of this degradative behavior, the substrate gel technique was used to analyze the cell-associated and secreted proteinase activities expressed by early, mid, and late gestation cytotrophoblasts. Several gelatin-degrading proteinases were uniquely expressed by early gestation, invasive cytotrophoblasts, and all these activities could be abolished by inhibitors of metalloproteinases. By early second trimester, the time when cytotrophoblast invasion rapidly diminishes in vivo, the proteinase pattern of the cytotrophoblasts was identical to that of term, noninvasive cells. These results are the first evidence suggesting that specialized, temporally regulated metalloproteinases are involved in trophoblast invasion of the uterus. Since the cytotrophoblasts from first trimester and later gestation placentas maintain for several days the temporally regulated degradative behavior displayed in vivo, the short-term cytotrophoblast outgrowth culture system described here should be useful in studying some of the early events in human placen


1985 ◽  
Vol 54 (04) ◽  
pp. 799-803 ◽  
Author(s):  
José Luís Pérez-Requejo ◽  
Justo Aznar ◽  
M Teresa Santos ◽  
Juana Vallés

SummaryIt is shown that the supernatant of unstirred whole blood at 37° C, stimulated by 1 μg/ml of collagen for 10 sec, produces a rapid generation of pro and antiaggregatory compounds with a final proaggregatory activity which can be detected for more than 60 min on a platelet rich plasma (PRP) by turbidometric aggregometry. A reversible aggregation wave that we have called BASIC wave (for Blood Aggregation Stimulatory and Inhibitory Compounds) is recorded. The collagen stimulation of unstirred PRP produces a similar but smaller BASIC wave. BASIC’s intensity increases if erythrocytes are added to PRP but decreases if white blood cells are added instead. Aspirin abolishes “ex vivo” the ability of whole blood and PRP to generate BASIC waves and dipyridamole “in vitro” significantly reduces BASIC’s intensity in whole blood in every tested sample, but shows little effect in PRP.


1962 ◽  
Vol 39 (3) ◽  
pp. 423-430
Author(s):  
H. L. Krüskemper ◽  
F. J. Kessler ◽  
E. Steinkrüger

ABSTRACT 1. Reserpine does not inhibit the tissue respiration of liver in normal male rats (in vitro). 2. The decrease of tissue respiration of the liver with simultaneous morphological stimulation of the thyroid gland after long administration of reserpine is due to a minute inhibition of the hormone synthesis in the thyroid gland. 3. The morphological alterations of the thyroid in experimental hypothyroidism due to perchlorate can not be prevented with reserpine.


1974 ◽  
Vol 77 (1) ◽  
pp. 64-70 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gustav Wägar

ABSTRACT Whether the short-term regulation of thyroidal protein synthesis by TSH occurs at the transcriptional or the translational level was tested by measuring the effect of actinomycin D (act D) on the TSH-induced stimulation of L-14C-leucine incorporation into the thyroidal proteins of rats. TSH was injected 6 h before the rats were killed. The thyroid glands were then removed and incubated in vitro in the presence of L-14C-leucine for 2 h. The pronounced stimulation of leucine incorporation in the TSH-treated animals was depressed as compared with controls but still significant even when the animals had been pre-treated with 100 μg act D 24 and 7 h before sacrifice. On the other hand, act D strongly decreased incorporation of 3H-uridine into RNA. Short-term regulation of thyroidal protein synthesis by TSH appears to be partly but not wholly dependent on neosynthesis of RNA. Hence regulation may partly occur at the translation level of protein synthesis.


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