lpa1 receptor
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Molecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (14) ◽  
pp. 4138
Author(s):  
Yeon-Jin Cho ◽  
Sun-Hye Choi ◽  
Ra-Mi Lee ◽  
Han-Sung Cho ◽  
Hyewhon Rhim ◽  
...  

Gintonin is a kind of ginseng-derived glycolipoprotein that acts as an exogenous LPA receptor ligand. Gintonin has in vitro and in vivo neuroprotective effects; however, little is known about the cellular mechanisms underlying the neuroprotection. In the present study, we aimed to clarify how gintonin attenuates iodoacetic acid (IAA)-induced oxidative stress. The mouse hippocampal cell line HT22 was used. Gintonin treatment significantly attenuated IAA-induced reactive oxygen species (ROS) overproduction, ATP depletion, and cell death. However, treatment with Ki16425, an LPA1/3 receptor antagonist, suppressed the neuroprotective effects of gintonin. Gintonin elicited [Ca2⁺]i transients in HT22 cells. Gintonin-mediated [Ca2⁺]i transients through the LPA1 receptor-PLC-IP3 signaling pathway were coupled to increase both the expression and release of BDNF. The released BDNF activated the TrkB receptor. Induction of TrkB phosphorylation was further linked to Akt activation. Phosphorylated Akt reduced IAA-induced oxidative stress and increased cell survival. Our results indicate that gintonin attenuated IAA-induced oxidative stress in neuronal cells by activating the LPA1 receptor-BDNF-TrkB-Akt signaling pathway. One of the gintonin-mediated neuroprotective effects may be achieved via anti-oxidative stress in nervous systems.


Cells ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 807
Author(s):  
Silvia Anahi Valdés-Rives ◽  
Denisse Arcos-Montoya ◽  
Marisol de la Fuente-Granada ◽  
Carmen J. Zamora-Sánchez ◽  
Luis Enrique Arias-Romero ◽  
...  

Lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) induces a wide range of cellular processes and its signaling is increased in several cancers including glioblastoma (GBM), a high-grade astrocytoma, which is the most common malignant brain tumor. LPA1 receptor is expressed in GBM cells and its signaling pathways activate protein kinases C (PKCs). A downstream target of PKC, involved in GBM progression, is the intracellular progesterone receptor (PR), which can be phosphorylated by this enzyme, increasing its transcriptional activity. Interestingly, in GBM cells, PKCα isotype translocates to the nucleus after LPA stimulation, resulting in an increase in PR phosphorylation. In this study, we determined that LPA1 receptor activation induces protein-protein interaction between PKCα and PR in human GBM cells; this interaction increased PR phosphorylation in serine400. Moreover, LPA treatment augmented VEGF transcription, a known PR target. This effect was blocked by the PR selective modulator RU486; also, the activation of LPA1/PR signaling promoted migration of GBM cells. Interestingly, using TCGA data base, we found that mRNA expression of LPAR1 increases according to tumor malignancy and correlates with a lower survival in grade III astrocytomas. These results suggest that LPA1/PR pathway regulates GBM progression.


Author(s):  
Cristina Rosell-Valle ◽  
Magdalena Martínez-Losa ◽  
Elisa Matas-Rico ◽  
Estela Castilla-Ortega ◽  
Emma Zambrana-Infantes ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Pengxiu Cao ◽  
Natalie M. Walker ◽  
Russell R. Braeuer ◽  
Serina Mazzoni-Putman ◽  
Yoshiro Aoki ◽  
...  

AbstractForkhead box F1 (FOXF1) is a lung embryonic mesenchyme-associated transcription factor that demonstrates persistent expression into adulthood in mesenchymal stromal cells. However, its biologic function in human adult lung-resident mesenchymal stromal cells (LR-MSCs) remain to be elucidated. Here, we demonstrate that FOXF1 expression acts as a restraint on the migratory function of LR-MSCs via its role as a novel transcriptional repressor of autocrine motility-stimulating factor Autotaxin (ATX). Fibrotic human LR-MSCs demonstrated lower expression of FOXF1 mRNA and protein, compared to non-fibrotic controls. RNAi-mediated FOXF1 silencing in LR-MSCs was associated with upregulation of key genes regulating proliferation, migration, and inflammatory responses and significantly higher migration were confirmed in FOXF1-silenced LR-MSCs by Boyden chamber. ATX is a secreted lysophospholipase D largely responsible for extracellular lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) production, and was among the top ten upregulated genes upon Affymetrix analysis. FOXF1-silenced LR-MSCs demonstrated increased ATX activity, while mFoxf1 overexpression diminished ATX expression and activity. The FOXF1 silencing-induced increase in LR-MSC migration was abrogated by genetic and pharmacologic targeting of ATX and LPA1 receptor. Chromatin immunoprecipitation analyses identified three putative FOXF1 binding sites in the 1.5 kb ATX promoter which demonstrated transcriptional repression of ATX expression. Together these findings identify FOXF1 as a novel transcriptional repressor of ATX and demonstrate that loss of FOXF1 promotes LR-MSC migration via the ATX/LPA/LPA1 signaling axis.


2020 ◽  
Vol 64 (3) ◽  
pp. 547-563 ◽  
Author(s):  
Denise G. Hemmings ◽  
David N. Brindley

Abstract Extracellular lysophosphatidate (LPA) signalling is regulated by the balance of LPA formation by autotaxin (ATX) versus LPA degradation by lipid phosphate phosphatases (LPP) and by the relative expressions of six G-protein-coupled LPA receptors. These receptors increase cell proliferation, migration, survival and angiogenesis. Acute inflammation produced by tissue damage stimulates ATX production and LPA signalling as a component of wound healing. If inflammation does not resolve, LPA signalling becomes maladaptive in conditions including arthritis, neurologic pain, obesity and cancers. Furthermore, LPA signalling through LPA1 receptors promotes fibrosis in skin, liver, kidneys and lungs. LPA also promotes the spread of tumours to other organs (metastasis) and the pro-survival properties of LPA explain why LPA counteracts the effects of chemotherapeutic agents and radiotherapy. ATX is secreted in response to radiation-induced DNA damage during cancer treatments and this together with increased LPA1 receptor expression leads to radiation-induced fibrosis. The anti-inflammatory agent, dexamethasone, decreases levels of inflammatory cytokines/chemokines. This is linked to a coordinated decrease in the production of ATX and LPA1/2 receptors and increased LPA degradation through LPP1. These effects explain why dexamethasone attenuates radiation-induced fibrosis. Increased LPA signalling is also associated with cardiovascular disease including atherosclerosis and deranged LPA signalling is associated with pregnancy complications including preeclampsia and intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy. LPA contributes to chronic inflammation because it stimulates the secretion of inflammatory cytokines/chemokines, which increase further ATX production and LPA signalling. Attenuating maladaptive LPA signalling provides a novel means of treating inflammatory diseases that underlie so many important medical conditions.


Cancers ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 999 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guanmin Meng ◽  
Melinda Wuest ◽  
Xiaoyun Tang ◽  
Jennifer Dufour ◽  
Todd P.W. McMullen ◽  
...  

We recently showed that radiation-induced DNA damage in breast adipose tissue increases autotaxin secretion, production of lysophosphatidate (LPA) and expression of LPA1/2 receptors. We also established that dexamethasone decreases autotaxin production and LPA signaling in non-irradiated adipose tissue. In the present study, we showed that dexamethasone attenuated the radiation-induced increases in autotaxin activity and the concentrations of inflammatory mediators in cultured human adipose tissue. We also exposed a breast fat pad in mice to three daily 7.5 Gy fractions of X-rays. Dexamethasone attenuated radiation-induced increases in autotaxin activity in plasma and mammary adipose tissue and LPA1 receptor levels in adipose tissue after 48 h. DEX treatment during five daily fractions of 7.5 Gy attenuated fibrosis by ~70% in the mammary fat pad and underlying lungs at 7 weeks after radiotherapy. This was accompanied by decreases in CXCL2, active TGF-β1, CTGF and Nrf2 at 7 weeks in adipose tissue of dexamethasone-treated mice. Autotaxin was located at the sites of fibrosis in breast tissue and in the underlying lungs. Consequently, our work supports the premise that increased autotaxin production and lysophosphatidate signaling contribute to radiotherapy-induced breast fibrosis and that dexamethasone attenuated the development of fibrosis in part by blocking this process.


2020 ◽  
Vol 164 ◽  
pp. 107896 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.D. Moreno-Fernández ◽  
C. Rosell-Valle ◽  
A. Bacq ◽  
O. Zanoletti ◽  
M. Cifuentes ◽  
...  

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