Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.1.1.34 (lipoprotein lipase)
7,025 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Despite the ubiquitous presence of basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) in normal tissues, endothelial cell proliferation in these tissues is usually very low, suggesting that bFGF is somehow sequestered from its site of action. Immunohistochemical staining revealed the localization of bFGF in basement membranes of diverse tissues, suggesting that the extracellular matrix (ECM) may serve as a reservoir for bFGF. Moreover, functional studies indicated that bFGF is an ECM component required for supporting endothelial cell proliferation and neuronal differentiation. We have found that bFGF is bound to heparan sulfate (HS) in the ECM and is released in an active form when the ECM-HS is degraded by heparanase expressed by normal and malignant cells (i.e. platelets, neutrophils, lymphoma cells). It is proposed that restriction of bFGF bioavailability by binding to ECM and local regulation of its release provide a novel mechanism for neovascularization in normal and pathological situations. The subendothelial ECM contains also tissue type- and urokinase type-plasminogen activators which participate in cell invasion and tissue remodeling. These results and studies on the properties of other ECM-immobilized enzymes (i.e. thrombin, plasmin, lipoprotein lipase) and growth factors (GM-CSF, IL-3, osteogenin), suggest that the ECM provides a storage depot for biologically active molecules which are thereby stabilized and protected. This may allow a more localized and persistent mode of action, as compared to the same molecules in a fluid phase.
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PMID:Extracellular matrix-resident basic fibroblast growth factor: implication for the control of angiogenesis. 171 29

Xiphoids of newborn mice consist of young chondrogenic cells of primary cartilage. During in vitro cultivation, xiphoids showed, morphologically, characteristics of adipose differentiation. This process progressed with time and by day 21 of the culture most of the cells in the xiphoids represented morphological mature adipocytes. During this period, the level of mRNA of lipoprotein lipase, and adipocyte-characteristic gene, increased steadily, while the level of collagen type II mRNA decreased. Continuous DNA synthesis during the cultivation period, even in mature adipocytes confirmed the viability of the cells. Mandibular condyles of newborn mice obtain chondroprogenitor cells as well as young and mature chondroblasts and represent secondary cartilage. Under identical culture conditions mandibular condyles obtained from the same mice undergo osteogenic differentiation and form mature bone within 7 to 10 days. Common to both xiphoids and mandibular condyles is the capacity to transdifferentiate, but they show distinct, divergent differentiation pathways. These findings indicate that cartilagenous tissue of xiphoids undergoes transdifferentiation into adipose tissue in vitro.
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PMID:Adipose differentiation of cartilage in vitro. 802 46

The bone marrow stroma consists of a heterogeneous population of cells which participate in osteogenic, adipogenic, and hematopoietic events. The murine stromal cell line, BMS2, exhibits the adipocytic and osteoblastic phenotypes in vitro. BMS2 differentiation was examined in response to cytokines which share the gp130 signal transducing protein within their receptor complex. Four of the cytokines (interleukin 6, interleukin 11, leukemia inhibitory factor, and oncostatin M) inhibited hydrocortisone-induced adipocyte differentiation in a dose dependent manner based on lipid accumulation and lipoprotein lipase enzyme activity. Inhibition occurred only when the cytokines were present during the initial 24 h of the induction period; after 48 h their effects were diminished. Likewise, these cytokines increased alkaline phosphatase enzyme activity twofold in preadipocyte BMS2 cells. Both leukemia inhibitory factor and oncostatin M induced early active gene expression in resting preadipocyte BMS2 cells and decreased the steady state mRNA level of a unique osteoblastic gene marker, osteocalcin. A fifth cytokine whose receptor complex shares the gp130 protein, ciliary neurotrophic factor, did not significantly regulate stromal cell differentiation when added by itself. However, with the addition of a missing component of its receptor complex, ciliary neurotrophic factor receptor alpha protein, this cytokine also inhibited BMS2 adipogenesis. Together, these data indicate that the cytokines whose receptors share the gp130 protein can modulate stromal cell commitment to the adipocyte and osteoblast differentiation pathways.
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PMID:Regulation of bone marrow stromal cell differentiation by cytokines whose receptors share the gp130 protein. 812 83

Knowledge of the controlling mechanisms of human osteoprogenitor cell differentiation has important implications for understanding bone turnover. The in vitro differentiation of human bone marrow fibroblasts into adipogenic and osteogenic cells and the interaction of 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D3 (1,25(OH)2D3) and dexamethasone in this process has been investigated together with the effects of human serum. Marrow fibroblasts cultured in human serum and dexamethasone for 28 days, generated lipid containing cells as confirmed by morphology, Oil red O staining and immunocytochemistry using antiserum to the adipocyte-specific protein, adipocyte P2 (aP2). In cultures containing 1,25(OH)2D3 and dexamethasone, adipogenesis was stimulated within 21 days. Osteocalcin expression, as assessed by in situ hybridization, was dependent on the presence of 1,25(OH)2D3 and was decreased in cultures treated with dexamethasone. Northern analysis confirmed the decrease in osteocalcin expression and increase in lipoprotein lipase expression with the appearance of the adipogenic phenotype in these cultures. Marrow cultures maintained for 14 days in human serum and osteotropic agents before switching to fetal calf serum indicated the continuous requirement of human serum in these cultures for adipogenesis. These results demonstrate that human serum contains factors that exert dramatic effects on human bone marrow cell differentiation to augment the osteogenic and adipogenic activity of 1,25(OH)2D3 and dexamethasone.
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PMID:Modulation of osteogenesis and adipogenesis by human serum in human bone marrow cultures. 940 73

The etiology of osteoporosis is multifactorial, but there is evidence from both animal and human studies that the volume of marrow adipose tissue increases when bone volume is reduced in osteoporosis. The cell-related mechanism that may account for this inverse relationship between the volume of marrow adipose tissue and bone remains to be clarified, although it is known that both adipocytes and osteoblasts are derived from stromal cells precursors in bone marrow. We report that retroviral transduction with a temperature-sensitive oncogene (SV40 large T antigen) can generate bipotential cell lines from human marrow stroma that are capable of directed differentiation, in vitro, down either an osteogenic or adipocytic lineage pathway. One such clone, designated hOP 7, expresses type alpha 1(I) procollagen and has low alkaline phosphatase (AP) activity under basal culture conditions that is reminiscent of an osteoprogenitor cell. Exposure of hOP 7 cells to dexamethasone upregulates AP activity and enables the cells to mineralize their extracellular matrix. Also, treatment with calcitriol induces osteocalcin expression and both PTH and PGE2 induce/augment cAMP formation. Incubation with normal rabbit serum, however, causes the cells to become adipogenic as demonstrated by histological staining with Oil-red-O, expression of mRNA for the early and late adipocyte markers lipoprotein lipase and glycerol 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, respectively, and loss of type alpha 1(I) procollagen mRNA. The generation of homogeneous populations of these cells, as confirmed by Southern blot analysis, demonstrates the capacity of a human clonal cell line to differentiate in either an osteogenic or adipogenic direction.
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PMID:Immortalization of human marrow stromal cells by retroviral transduction with a temperature sensitive oncogene: identification of bipotential precursor cells capable of directed differentiation to either an osteoblast or adipocyte phenotype. 943 8

The decrease in bone volume associated with osteoporosis and age-related osteopenia is accompanied by increased marrow adipose tissue formation. Reversal of this process may provide a novel therapeutic approach for osteopenic disorders. We have shown that cells cultured from human trabecular bone are not only osteogenic, but are able also to undergo adipocyte differentiation under defined culture conditions. Osteoblast differentiation was induced by 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 (1,25(OH)2D3) and adipocyte differentiation by dexamethasone (dex) plus 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX) treatment. Adipogenesis was characterized by lineage-specific enzyme and gene activities, alpha-glycerophosphate-3-dehydrogenase activity, fatty acid binding protein, aP2 and lipoprotein lipase expression. Osteoblastogenesis was assessed by osteoblast characteristic 1,25(OH)2D3 induction of alkaline phosphatase activity and osteoblast-specific 1,25(OH)2D3-induced osteocalcin synthesis and release. We provide evidence for a common pluripotent mesenchymal stem cell that is able either to undergo adipogenesis or osteoblastogenesis, using clonal cell lines derived from human trabecular bone cell cultures. Adipogenesis can be induced also by long chain fatty acids and the thiazolidinedione troglitazone. Dex plus IBMX-induced adipogenesis can be inhibited by interleukin-1beta, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, and transforming growth factor-beta. Interestingly, and in contrast to extramedullary adipocyte differentiation as shown by mouse 3T3L-1 and a human liposarcoma SW872 cell line, trabecular bone adipogenesis was unaffected by insulin. Also, the formation of fully differentiated adipocytes from trabecular bone cells after troglitazone treatment and long chain fatty acids was dependent on increased expression of the nuclear hormone receptor peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma2 caused by dex plus IBMX. Specific inhibition of marrow adipogenesis and promotion of osteoblastogenesis of a common precursor cell may provide a novel therapeutic approach to the treatment of osteopenic disorders.
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PMID:Human trabecular bone cells are able to express both osteoblastic and adipocytic phenotype: implications for osteopenic disorders. 952 37

Bone marrow is believed to contain multipotential stromal stem cells which can differentiate into osteoblasts, chondrocytes, adipocytes, and myoblasts (Prockop, D. J. Science 276, 71-74, 1997). Therefore, characterization and identification of the stem-like cell within the stromal cells are important to understand bone marrow function in relation to the hematopoietic microenvironment, and repair/regeneration of tissue defects. TBR31-2 cell, a bone marrow stromal cell line established from bone marrow of transgenic mice harboring temperature-sensitive (ts) simian virus (SV) 40T-antigen gene for immortality, is induced toward both adipocytic and osteogenic cells under conditions of the inactivation of T-antigen (Okuyama, R., Yanai, N., Obinata, M. Exp. Cell Res. 218, 424-429, 1995). In this work, using a semiquantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis, mRNA expressions of tissue-specific differentiation markers for adipocyte (lipoprotein lipase), osteoblast (type I collagen and osteocalcin), chondrocyte (type II and X collagen), and muscle cell (desmin) were examined during a long-term culture of the cell. In addition, histochemical studies showed the appearance of adipocytic, osteoblastic, chondrocytic, and muscle cells during this long-term culture. Thus, TBR31-2, which has characteristics of an undifferentiated cell, has the potential to express the multipotential cell lineages. These results indicated that a multipotential progenitor cell including potential to differentiate into a muscle cell and which is situated in the mesenchymal cell lineage was first obtained.
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PMID:Multipotency of a bone marrow stromal cell line, TBR31-2, established from ts-SV40 T antigen gene transgenic mice. 1067 25

Adult human mesenchymal stem cells are primary, multipotent cells capable of differentiating to osteocytic, chondrocytic, and adipocytic lineages when stimulated under appropriate conditions. To characterize the molecular mechanisms that regulate osteogenic differentiation, we examined the contribution of mitogen-activated protein kinase family members, ERK, JNK, and p38. Treatment of these stem cells with osteogenic supplements resulted in a sustained phase of ERK activation from day 7 to day 11 that coincided with differentiation, before decreasing to basal levels. Activation of JNK occurred much later (day 13 to day 17) in the osteogenic differentiation process. This JNK activation was associated with extracellular matrix synthesis and increased calcium deposition, the two hallmarks of bone formation. Inhibition of ERK activation by PD98059, a specific inhibitor of the ERK signaling pathway, blocked the osteogenic differentiation in a dose-dependent manner, as did transfection with a dominant negative form of MAP kinase kinase (MEK-1). Significantly, the blockage of osteogenic differentiation resulted in the adipogenic differentiation of the stem cells and the expression of adipose-specific mRNAs peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma2, aP2, and lipoprotein lipase. These observations provide a potential mechanism involving MAP kinase activation in osteogenic differentiation of adult stem cells and suggest that commitment of hMSCs into osteogenic or adipogenic lineages is governed by activation or inhibition of ERK, respectively.
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PMID:Adult human mesenchymal stem cell differentiation to the osteogenic or adipogenic lineage is regulated by mitogen-activated protein kinase. 1073 16

Osteoblasts and adipocytes are thought to differentiate from a common stromal progenitor cell. These two phenotypically mature cell types show a high degree of plasticity, which can be observed when cells are grown under specific culture conditions. Gap junctions are abundant among osteoblastic cells in vivo and in vitro, whereas they are down-regulated during adipogenesis. Gap junctional communication (GJC) modulates the expression of genes associated with the mature osteoblastic phenotype. Inhibition of GJC utilizing 18-alpha-glycyrrhetinic acid (AGRA) blocks the maturation of pre-osteoblastic cells in vitro. Moreover, cytoplasmic lipid droplets are detectable at the end of the culture period, suggesting that GJC inhibition may favor an adipocytic phenotype. We used several human osteoblastic cell lines, as well as bone-derived primary osteoblastic cells, to show that confluent cultures of human osteoblastic cells grown under osteogenic conditions developed an adipocytic phenotype after 3 days of complete inhibition of GJC using AGRA or oleamide, two dissimilar nontoxic reversible inhibitors. Development of an adipogenic phenotype was confirmed by the accumulation of triglyceride droplets and the increase in mRNA expression of the adipocytic markers peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma2 and lipoprotein lipase. Glycyrrhizic acid, a noninhibitory AGRA analog, or alpha-bromopalmitate, a nondegradable fatty acid, had no effect. Modulation of skeletal GJC may represent a new pharmacological target by which inhibition of marrow adipogenesis can take place with the parallel enhancement of osteoblastogenesis, thus providing a novel therapeutic approach to the treatment of human age-related osteopenic diseases and postmenopausal osteoporosis.
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PMID:Inhibition of gap-junctional communication induces the trans-differentiation of osteoblasts to an adipocytic phenotype in vitro. 1127 24

Explant cultures of adult human trabecular bone fragments give rise to osteoblastic cells, that are known to express osteoblast-related genes and mineralize extracellular matrix. These osteoblastic cells have also been shown to undergo adipogenesis in vitro and chondrogenesis in vivo. Here we report the in vitro developmental potential of adult human osteoblastic cells (hOB) derived from explant cultures of collagenase-pretreated trabecular bone fragments. In addition to osteogenic and adipogenic differentiation, these cells are capable of chondrogenic differentiation in vitro in a manner similar to adult human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal progenitor cells. High-density pellet cultures of hOB maintained in chemically defined serum-free medium, supplemented with transforming growth factor-beta1, were composed of morphologically distinct, chondrocyte-like cells expressing mRNA transcripts of collagen types II, IX and X, and aggrecan. The cells within the high-density pellet cultures were surrounded by a sulfated proteoglycan-rich extracellular matrix that immunostained for collagen type II and proteoglycan link protein. Osteogenic differentiation of hOB was verified by an increased number of alkaline phosphatase-positive cells, that expressed osteoblast-related transcripts such as alkaline phosphatase, collagen type I, osteopontin and osteocalcin, and formed mineralized matrix in monolayer cultures treated with ascorbate, beta-glycerophosphate, and bone morphogenetic protein-2. Adipogenic differentiation of hOB was determined by the appearance of intracellular lipid droplets, and expression of adipocyte-specific genes, such as lipoprotein lipase and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma2, in monolayer cultures treated with dexamethasone, indomethacin, insulin and 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine. Taken together, these results show that cells derived from collagenase-treated adult human trabecular bone fragments have the potential to differentiate into multiple mesenchymal lineages in vitro, indicating their developmental plasticity and suggesting their mesenchymal progenitor nature.
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PMID:Multilineage mesenchymal differentiation potential of human trabecular bone-derived cells. 1238 74


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