Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.1.3.1 (alkaline phosphatase)
47,916 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The implantation of bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) into muscular tissues induces ectopic bone formation at the site of implantation. To investigate the mechanism underlying this process, we examined whether recombinant bone morphogenetic protein-2 (BMP-2) converts the differentiation pathway of the clonal myoblastic cell line, C2C12, into that of osteoblast lineage. Incubating the cells with 300 ng/ml of BMP-2 for 6 d almost completely inhibited the formation of the multinucleated myotubes expressing troponin T and myosin heavy chain, and induced the appearance of numerous alkaline phosphatase (ALP)-positive cells. BMP-2 dose dependently induced ALP activity, parathyroid hormone (PTH)-dependent 3',5'-cAMP production, and osteocalcin production at concentrations above 100 ng/ml. The concentration of BMP-2 required to induce these osteoblastic phenotypes was the same as that required to almost completely inhibit myotube formation. Incubating primary muscle cells with 300 ng/ml of BMP-2 for 6 d also inhibited myotube formation, whereas induced ALP activity and osteocalcin production. Incubation with 300 ng/ml of BMP-2 suppressed the expression of mRNA for muscle creatine kinase within 6 h, whereas it induced mRNA expression for ALP, PTH/PTH-related protein (PTHrP) receptors, and osteocalcin within 24-48 h. BMP-2 completely inhibited the expression of myogenin mRNA by day 3. By day 3, BMP-2 also inhibited the expression of MyoD mRNA, but it was transiently stimulated 12 h after exposure to BMP-2. Expression of Id-1 mRNA was greatly stimulated by BMP-2. When C2C12 cells pretreated with BMP-2 for 6 d were transferred to a colony assay system in the absence of BMP-2, more than 84% of the colonies generated became troponin T-positive and ALP activity disappeared. TGF-beta 1 also inhibited myotube formation in C2C12 cells, and suppressed the expression of myogenin and MyoD mRNAs without inducing that of Id-1 mRNA. However, no osteoblastic phenotype was induced by TGF-beta 1 in C2C12 cells. TGF-beta 1 potentiated the inhibitory effect of BMP-2 on myotube formation, whereas TGF-beta 1 reduced ALP activity and osteocalcin production induced by BMP-2 in C2C12 cells. These results indicate that BMP-2 specifically converts the differentiation pathway of C2C12 myoblasts into that of osteoblast lineage cells, but that the conversion is not heritable.
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PMID:Bone morphogenetic protein-2 converts the differentiation pathway of C2C12 myoblasts into the osteoblast lineage. 779 24

We studied the expression of FREK (fibroblast growth factor receptor-like embryonic kinase), a new receptor recently cloned from quail embryo, during the differentiation of skeletal muscle satellite cells and epiphyseal growth-plate chondrocytes. Although FREK mRNA was expressed in both cell types, satellite cells expressed higher levels of this mRNA than chondrocytes. FREK gene expression was found to be modulated by b-FGF in a biphasic manner: low concentrations increased expression, whereas high concentrations attenuated it. In both cell cultures, the levels of FREK mRNA declined during terminal differentiation. Moreover, retinoic acid (RA), which induces skeletal muscle satellite cells to differentiate, also caused a reduction in FREK gene expression in these cells. Induction of chondrocyte differentiation with ascorbic acid was monitored by a decrease in collagen type II gene expression and an increase in alkaline phosphatase activity. Satellite cell differentiation was marked by morphological changes as well as by increased sarcomeric myogenin content and creatine kinase activity and changes in the expression of the regulatory muscle-specific genes, MyoD and myogenin. DNA synthesis in both cell types was stimulated by b-FGF. However, in satellite cells, the response was bell-shaped, peaking at 1 ng/ml b-FGF, whereas in chondrocytes, higher levels of b-FGF were needed. b-FGF-dependent DNA synthesis in satellite cells was decreased by RA at concentrations over 10(-7) M. The observed correlation between the level of FREK gene expression and various stages of differentiation, its modulation by b-FGF and RA, as well as the correlation between FREK gene expression and the physiological response to b-FGF, suggest that this specific FGF receptor plays an important role in muscle and cartilage cell differentiation.
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PMID:A new avian fibroblast growth factor receptor in myogenic and chondrogenic cell differentiation. 818 20

Bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) is a family of cytokines that induce ectopic bone formation when implanted into muscular tissues. We reported that BMP-2 inhibits the terminal differentiation of C2C12 myoblasts and converts them into osteoblast lineage cells (Katagiri, T., Yamaguchi, A., Komaki, M., Abe, E., Takahashi, N., Ikeda, T., Rosen, V., Wozney, J. M., Fujisawa-Sehara, A., and Suda, T. (1994) J. Cell Biol. 127, 1755-1766). In the present study, we examined the molecular mechanism of the inhibitory effect of BMP-2 on terminal differentiation of myogenic cells. When either MyoD or myogenin cDNA was introduced into C3H10T1/2 (10T1/2) cells with a muscle-specific CAT reporter containing four copies of the right E-box of muscle creatine kinase (MCK) enhancer, the CAT activity was dose-dependently suppressed by BMP-2. Furthermore, BMP-2 inhibited the terminal differentiation of these subclonal 10T1/2 cells that stably expressed MyoD or myogenin into mature myotubes that expressed myosin heavy chain and troponin T. The differentiation of a subclone of the MyoD-transfected NIH3T3 cells into mature muscle cells was also inhibited by BMP-2. BMP-2 induced alkaline phosphatase activity in 10T1/2-derived, but not in NIH3T3-derived MyoD-transfected cells. These cells constitutively expressed exogenous MyoD and myogenin, which were localized exclusively in the nuclei irrespective of the presence and the absence of BMP-2. However, these cells failed to express the mRNAs of endogenous myogenic factors and MCK when cultured with BMP-2. In the electrophoresis mobility shift assay using nuclear extracts of the myogenic cells, MyoD and myogenin bound to the right E-box in the enhancer region of the MCK gene even in the presence of BMP-2. These results suggest that BMP-2 inhibits the terminal differentiation of myogenic cells by suppressing the transcriptional activity of the myogenic factors.
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PMID:Bone morphogenetic protein-2 inhibits terminal differentiation of myogenic cells by suppressing the transcriptional activity of MyoD and myogenin. 902 93

Members of the transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta superfamily bind the transmembrane serine/threonine kinase complex consisting of type I and type II receptors. Their intracellular signals are propagated via respective type I receptors. Bone morphogenetic protein (BMP)-2, a member of the TGF-beta superfamily, induces ectopic bone formation when implanted into muscular tissues. Two type I receptors (BMPR-IA and BMPR-IB) have been identified for BMP-2. We have reported that BMP-2 inhibits the terminal differentiation of C2C12 myoblasts and converts their differentiation pathway into that of osteoblast lineage cells (Katagiri, T., Yamaguchi, A., Komaki, M., Abe, E., Takahashi, N., Ikeda, T., Rosen, V., Wozney, J. M., Fujisawa-Sehara, A. and Suda, T. (1994) J. Cell Biol. 127, 1755-1766). In the present study, we examined the involvement of functional BMP-2 type I receptors in signal transduction in C2C12 cells, which expressed mRNA for BMPR-IA, but not for BMPR-IB in Northern blotting. TGF-beta type I receptor (TbetaR-I) mRNA was also expressed in C2C12 cells. Subclonal cell lines of C2C12 that stably expressed a kinase domain-truncated BMPR-IA (DeltaBMPR-IA) differentiated into myosin heavy chain-expressing myotubes but not into alkaline phosphatase (ALP)-positive cells, even in the presence of BMP-2. In contrast, the differentiation of the DeltaBMPR-IA-transfected C2C12 cells into myotubes was suppressed by TGF-beta1, as in the parental C2C12 cells. BMP-2 did not efficiently suppress the mRNA expression of muscle-specific genes such as muscle creatine kinase, MyoD, and myogenin, nor did it induce the expression of ALP mRNA in the DeltaBMPR-IA-transfected C2C12 cells. In contrast, TGF-beta1 inhibited mRNA expression of the muscle-specific genes in those cells. When wild-type BMPR-IA was transiently transfected into the DeltaBMPR-IA-transfected C2C12 cells, a number of ALP-positive cells appeared in the presence of BMP-2. Transfection of wild-type BMPR-IB or TbetaR-I failed to increase the number of ALP-positive cells. These results suggest that the BMP-2-induced signals, which inhibit myogenic differentiation and induce osteoblast differentiation, are transduced via BMPR-IA in C2C12 myoblasts.
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PMID:A kinase domain-truncated type I receptor blocks bone morphogenetic protein-2-induced signal transduction in C2C12 myoblasts. 926 44

Bone morphogenetic protein-2 (BMP-2), a member of transforming growth factor-beta superfamily, inhibits the terminal differentiation of C2C12 myoblasts and changes their differentiation pathway into cells expressing osteoblast phenotypes such as alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity and osteocalcin production (Katagiri et al., 1994, J. Cell Biol. 127, 1755-1766). Two type I receptors for BMP-2 (BMPR-IA and BMPR-IB) have been cloned, but the role of the respective receptors in signal transduction is not clear. In the present study, we examined the signal transduction of BMP-2 in C2C12 cells using constitutively activated mutant BMPR-IA and BMPR-IB. C2C12 cells expressed BMPR-IA and BMPR-II mRNAs, but not BMPR-IB mRNA at detectable levels in Northern blotting. When mutated BMPR-IA and BMPR-IB were transiently transfected into C2C12 cells, both BMPR-IA and BMPR-IB similarly induced ALP activity in the absence of BMP-2. We also established subclonal cell lines of C2C12 cells by stably transfecting mutated BMPR-IB. When the mutated BMPR-IB-transfected cells were cultured in medium with low serum (differentiation medium) without BMP-2, the cells differentiated into ALP-positive mononuclear cells and not into myosin heavy chain-positive myotubes. These mutated BMPR-IB-transfected cells expressed ALP activity and osteocalcin mRNA in a time-dependent manner, but neither muscle creatine kinase nor myogenin mRNAs. These results indicate that the mutated BMP-2 type I receptors can constitutively transduce BMP-2 signals in the absence of the ligand in C2C12 cells.
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PMID:Constitutively active BMP type I receptors transduce BMP-2 signals without the ligand in C2C12 myoblasts. 929 60

Bone morphogenetic protein-2 (BMP-2) inhibits terminal differentiation of C2C12 myoblasts and converts them into osteoblast lineage cells (Katagiri, T., Yamaguchi, A., Komaki, M., Abe, E., Takahashi, N., Ikeda, T., Rosen, V., Wozney, J. M., Fujisawa-Sehara, A., and Suda T. (1994) J. Cell Biol. 127, 1755-1766). In the present study, we examined the possible involvement of Smad proteins, vertebrate homologues of Drosophila Mothers against decapentaplegic, in the BMP effects on the differentiation of C2C12 myoblasts. C2C12 cells expressed Smad1, Smad2, Smad4, and Smad5 mRNAs, and expression levels were not altered by treatment with BMP-2 or TGF-beta1. When Smads were transiently transfected into C2C12 cells, both Smad1 and Smad5 induced alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity and decreased the activity of myogenin promoter/chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (myogenin-CAT) without BMP-2. When C-terminal-truncated Smad1 and Smad5 were transfected into constitutively active BMP receptor type IB (BMPR-IB)-expressing C2C12 cells, BMP signals were blocked, resulting in an increase in myogenin-CAT activity. On the other hand, Smad1 and Smad5 decreased myogenin-CAT activity but did not induce ALP activity in MyoD-transfected NIH3T3 fibroblasts. These results suggest that both Smad1 and Smad5 are involved in the intracellular BMP signals which inhibit myogenic differentiation and induce osteoblast differentiation in C2C12 cells, and that the conversion of the two differentiation pathways is regulated independently at a transcriptional level.
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PMID:Smad1 and smad5 act downstream of intracellular signalings of BMP-2 that inhibits myogenic differentiation and induces osteoblast differentiation in C2C12 myoblasts. 929 54

Rhabdomyosarcoma in adults represents a rare soft tissue neoplasm which is seen most frequently in its pleomorphic subtype in this age group. Very rarely, clear cell and spindle-cell variants have been reported. In this study we describe three cases of rhabdomyosarcoma in adult patients, characterised by prominent hyaline sclerosis and a pseudovascular growth pattern. All cases were identified in the consultation files of one of the authors and routinely processed. Immunohistochemical studies were performed on paraffin sections with the alkaline phosphatase-antialkaline phosphatase method. The patients, two women and one man, were 40, 41, and 56 years old. One developed a deep-seated soft tissue mass in the left lower leg, and one, a tumour of the left upper jaw. In one patient a bone tumour in the proximal body of the sacrum without extension into soft tissues was seen. The patients were treated by wide excision, piecemeal excision and incomplete excision in one case each; additional radiotherapy was performed in all three cases, and chemotherapy in two patients. In one patient multiple pulmonary metastases were noted, which showed progression despite systemic chemotherapy. Histologically, the neoplasms were composed of round/polygonal and spindle-shaped tumour cells including typical rhabdomyoblasts. In all cases a pseudovascular pattern and prominent hyaline sclerosis of the intercellular matrix was seen. Immunohistochemically, tumour cells stained positively for desmin and muscle actin (HHF35) and also for markers of striated muscle differentiation (myogenin, MyoD1, fast myosin). In this paper an unusual morphological variant of rhabdomyosarcoma arising in adult patients is described, which should be added to the morphological spectrum of these neoplasms.
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PMID:Sclerosing, pseudovascular rhabdomyosarcoma in adults. Clinicopathological and immunohistochemical analysis of three cases. 1083 31

We investigated the modulation of critical transcriptional steps of C2C12 myoblast/osteoblast transdifferentiation triggered by the bone morphogenetic protein 2 (BMP2) signaling protein, in response to epigenetic inhibition of the endocytotic internalization of exogenous BMP2. BMP2 endocytosis was inhibited chemically with polyethylene glycol-50 (PEG-Chol) and cyclodextrin and mechanically by mild hyposmotic treatment. BMP2-dependent nuclear translocation of the mother against Dpp (Smad1) transcription factor was ten times faster if BMP2 endocytosis was inhibited. Smad1-dependent expression of the JunB gene, the first transcriptional step in myoblast dedifferentiation, was increased by a factor of three to four. JunB-dependent levels of myogenin repression, one of the critical markers of terminal myoblastic differentiation, was amplified by a factor of three. Smad1-dependent levels of alkaline phosphatase expression, one of the C2C12 osteoblast differentiation markers, were 3.5 to 5 times higher. The same behavior was observed for osteopontin, the other C2C12 osteoblast differentiation marker. These results suggest that the cell genome could "sense" tissue mechanical deformations by mechanical inhibition of signaling protein endocytosis, thereby translating mechanical strains into transcription events involved in cell differentiation.
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PMID:C2C12 myoblast/osteoblast transdifferentiation steps enhanced by epigenetic inhibition of BMP2 endocytosis. 1205 92

Placental alkaline phosphatase (PLAP) is normally produced by primordial germ cells and syncytiotrophoblasts, and the detection of its expression has been useful in the diagnosis of germ cell tumors. We have recently observed PLAP immunoreactivity in normal human adult and fetal muscle tissue. Based on this observation, we explored the possible role of PLAP in the diagnosis of soft tissue tumors. A total of 271 tumors were studied. These included tumors with myogenic, neural, fibrous, myofibroblastic, lipomatous, neuroepithelial, perivascular, and epithelial differentiation. A formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded section from each tumor was stained with PLAP monoclonal antibody using standard immunohistochemical methods preceded by antigen retrieval. In addition, western blotting with PLAP monoclonal antibodies was performed on fresh samples from a uterine leiomyoma, grossly normal myometrium, and placenta. Also, formalin-fixed sections of fetal skeletal muscle were labeled with double immunohistochemistry techniques using antibodies to myogenin and PLAP. Cytoplasmic PLAP reactivity was detected in all leiomyomas and rhabdomyosarcomas (100%), 7 of 15 (46%) leiomyosarcomas, 15 of 19 (79%) desmoplastic small round cell tumors, 2 of 15 (13%) gastrointestinal stromal tumors, 1 of 8 (13%) Wilms' tumors, 1 of 9 synovial sarcomas (9%), and 2 of 7 (29%) myofibroblastic tumors. No PLAP reactivity was detected in hyperplastic scars, nodular fasciitis, or the other remaining soft tissue and epithelial tumors. Double immunohistochemistry studies showed coexpression of myogenin and PLAP in fetal skeletal muscle cells, and western blot analysis showed a 70-kDa band in samples derived from grossly normal placenta, benign myometrium, and a uterine leiomyoma. PLAP immunoreactivity is detected in soft tissue tumors with known myogenic differentiation. PLAP immunoreactivity seems to relate to the degree of myogenic differentiation in soft tissue tumors and is more frequently expressed in cells with skeletal muscle differentiation and least in those with myofibroblastic features. The biologic function of PLAP in muscle and tumors with myogenic differentiation is unknown and merits further investigation. In addition to its role as a germ cell marker, PLAP may also be used as a myogenic marker in the diagnosis of soft tissue tumors.
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PMID:Detection and diagnostic utilization of placental alkaline phosphatase in muscular tissue and tumors with myogenic differentiation. 1912 Oct 94

The chimeric fusion gene EWS/FLI-1 is detected in most cases of Ewing's sarcoma (ES), the second most common malignant bone tumor of childhood. Although 80% of ES tumors develop in skeletal sites, the remainder can arise in almost any soft tissue location. The lineage of the cell developing the EWS/FLI-1 gene fusion has not been fully characterized but is generally considered to be of either mesenchymal or neural crest origin. To study this oncogene in a conceptually relevant target cell, EWS/FLI-1 was introduced into the murine cell line C2C12, a myoblast cell line capable of differentiation into muscle, bone, or fat. In this cellular context, EWS/FLI-1 profoundly inhibited the myogenic differentiation program. The block in C2C12 myogenic differentiation required the nuclear localization and DNA-binding functions of EWS/FLI-1 and was mediated by transcriptional and posttranscriptional suppression of the myogenic transcription factors MyoD and myogenin. Interestingly, C2C12-EWS/FLI-1 cells constitutively expressed alkaline phosphatase, a bone lineage marker, and were alkaline phosphatase positive by histochemistry but showed no other evidence of bone lineage commitment. Consistent with recent findings in human ES tumor cell lines, C2C12-EWS/FLI-1 cells constitutively expressed cyclin D1 and demonstrated decreased expression of the cell cycle regulator p21(cip1), even under differentiation conditions and at confluent density. This C2C12-EWS/FLI-1 cell model may assist in the identification of novel differentially expressed genes relevant to ES and provide further insight into the cell(s) of origin developing ES-associated genetic fusions.
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PMID:Alteration of mesodermal cell differentiation by EWS/FLI-1, the oncogene implicated in Ewing's sarcoma. 1250 48


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