Publications by authors named "Daegelen D"

Cardiac fibrosis is critically involved in the adverse remodeling accompanying dilated cardiomyopathies (DCMs), which leads to cardiac dysfunction and heart failure (HF). Connective tissue growth factor (CTGF), a profibrotic cytokine, plays a key role in this deleterious process. Some beneficial effects of IGF1 on cardiomyopathy have been described, but its potential role in improving DCM is less well characterized.

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Adult skeletal muscles adapt their fiber size to workload. We show that serum response factor (Srf) is required for satellite cell-mediated hypertrophic muscle growth. Deletion of Srf from myofibers and not satellite cells blunts overload-induced hypertrophy, and impairs satellite cell proliferation and recruitment to pre-existing fibers.

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Article Synopsis
  • Serum response factor (SRF) works with two coactivator families (TCFs and MRTFs) to regulate gene expression, playing a crucial role in thymocyte positive selection and T-cell development.
  • SRF is essential for certain immune cell maturation processes but not required for early thymocyte development or negative selection.
  • Specific mutations in SRF that hinder recruitment of coactivators affect its functionality; however, pairing a TCF activation domain with SRF can restore proper T-cell development, highlighting the importance of ERK signaling in this process.
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Adhesion properties of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) in the bone marrow (BM) niches control their migration and affect their cell-cycle dynamics. The serum response factor (Srf) regulates growth factor-inducible genes and genes controlling cytoskeleton structures involved in cell spreading, adhesion, and migration. We identified a role for Srf in HSC adhesion and steady-state hematopoiesis.

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Activation of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) inhibits protein synthesis through the suppression of the mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1), a critical regulator of muscle growth. The purpose of this investigation was to determine the role of the AMPKalpha1 catalytic subunit on muscle cell size control and adaptation to muscle hypertrophy. We found that AMPKalpha1(-/-) primary cultured myotubes and myofibers exhibit larger cell size compared with control cells in response to chronic Akt activation.

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Aging is associated with a progressive loss of muscle mass, increased adiposity and fibrosis that leads to sarcopenia. At the molecular level, muscle aging is known to alter the expression of a variety of genes but very little is known about the molecular effectors involved. SRF (Serum Response Factor) is a crucial transcription factor for muscle-specific gene expression and for post-natal skeletal muscle growth.

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Background And Aims: Regional alterations in ventricular mechanical functions are a primary determinant for the risk of myocardial injuries in various cardiomyopathies. The serum response factor (SRF) is a transcription factor regulating contractile and cytoskeletal genes and may play an important role in the remodelling of myocardium at the cellular level.

Methods: Using Desmin-Cre transgenic mice, we generated a model of mosaic inactivation of a floxed-Srf allele in the heart to analyze the consequence of regional alterations of SRF-mediated functions in the myocardium.

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Various immediate early genes (IEGs) upregulated during the early process of liver regeneration are transcriptional targets of the serum response factor (SRF). We show here that the expression of SRF is rapidly induced in rodent liver after partial hepatectomy. Because the inactivation of the SRF gene in mice is embryonic lethal, the in vivo role of SRF in liver regeneration after partial hepatectomy was analyzed in mutant mice conditionally deleted for SRF in the liver.

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Serum response factor (SRF) is a crucial transcriptional factor for muscle-specific gene expression. We investigated SRF function in adult skeletal muscles, using mice with a postmitotic myofiber-targeted disruption of the SRF gene. Mutant mice displayed severe skeletal muscle mass reductions due to a postnatal muscle growth defect resulting in highly hypotrophic adult myofibers.

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The Serum Response Factor (SRF) is widely expressed transcription factor acting at the confluence of multiple signaling pathways and has been implicated in the control of differentiation, growth, and cell death. In the present study, we found that SRF is expressed in the developing and adult pancreas. To explore the possible role of SRF in this organ, we have generated mutant mice with conditional disruption of the Srf gene.

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Transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) is known to be expressed in the environment of developing fast muscle fibres during ontogenesis. In the present study, we have examined effects of administration of either TGF-beta1 or neutralizing TGF-beta1 antibody on the induction of fast type phenotype in regenerating skeletal muscles in rats. Expressions of fast and slow myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoforms were studied using protein electrophoresis, at 3 and 6 weeks after myotoxic treatment.

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Background: Serum response factor (SRF) is a cardiac transcription factor involved in cell growth and differentiation. We have shown, using the Cre/loxP system, that cardiac-specific disruption of SRF gene in the embryonic heart results in lethal cardiac defects. The role of SRF in adult heart is unknown.

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Muscle fibers show great differences in their contractile and metabolic properties. This diversity enables skeletal muscles to fulfill and adapt to different tasks. In this report, we show that the Six/Eya pathway is implicated in the establishment and maintenance of the fast-twitch skeletal muscle phenotype.

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Serum response factor (SRF) is at the confluence of multiple signaling pathways controlling the transcription of immediate-early response genes and muscle-specific genes. There are active SRF target sequences in more than 50 genes expressed in the three muscle lineages including normal and diseased hearts. However, the role of SRF in heart formation has not been addressed in vivo thus far due to the early requirement of SRF for mesoderm formation.

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Because the GnRH receptor plays a paramount role within the reproductive axis, the understanding of the molecular apparatus that governs the tissue-specific expression and regulation of this gene must lead to a better knowledge of the physiology and the physiopathology of the gonadotrope function. To elucidate these mechanisms, we have used two complementary in vivo and in vitro approaches. Firstly, we have isolated the pituitary promoter of the rat GnRH receptor gene and investigated its activity using transient transfection into two gonadotrope-derived cell lines, the alphaT3-1 and the LbetaT2 cell lines.

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We previously characterised transgenic mice in which fast-muscle-specific regulatory sequences from the human aldolase A pM promoter drive the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene expression. Mutation of a NF1/MEF2 binding site (M2 motif) in this promoter does not affect fibre-type specificity of the transgene but modifies its expression in a subset of fast-twitch fibres at the limb level, preferentially affecting distal limb muscles. We investigated the molecular and cellular bases of this peculiar expression pattern that provided an adequate model to characterise the mechanisms responsible for muscle positional information.

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Previous studies dealing with the mechanisms underlying the tissue-specific and regulated expression of the GnRH receptor (GnRH-R) gene led us to define several cis-acting regulatory sequences in the rat GnRH-R gene promoter. These include functional sites for steroidogenic factor 1, activator protein 1, and motifs related to GATA and LIM homeodomain response elements as demonstrated primarily in transient transfection assays in mouse gonadotrope-derived cell lines. To understand these mechanisms in more depth, we generated transgenic mice bearing the 3.

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Muscle electrotransfer has recently become a promising tool for efficient delivery of plasmids and transgene expression in skeletal muscle. This technology has been mainly applied to use of muscle as a bioreactor for production of therapeutic proteins. However, it remains to be determined whether muscle electrotransfer may also be accurately used as an alternative tool to transgenesis for studying aspects of muscle-specific gene control that must be explored in fully mature muscle fibers in vivo, such as fiber specificity and nerve dependence.

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We have previously shown that the proximal sequences of the human aldolase A fast-muscle-specific promoter (pM) are sufficient to target the expression of a linked CAT reporter gene to all fast, glycolytic trunk and limb muscles of transgenic mice (pM310CAT lines) in a manner mimicking the activity of the endogenous mouse promoter. When a NF1-binding site (motif M2) in this proximal regulatory region is mutated, the activity of the corresponding mM2 transgene is strongly affected but only in a some fast muscles. Here we show that the mutation of the M2 motif has only mild effects on pM activity in axial and proximal limb, while it drastically reduces this activity in both fore and hind limb distal muscles.

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A testicular form of hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL(tes)), a triacylglycerol lipase, and cholesterol esterase, is expressed in male germ cells. Northern blot analysis showed HSL(tes) mRNA expression in early spermatids. Immunolocalization of the protein in human and rodent seminiferous tubules indicated that the highest level of expression occurred in elongated spermatids.

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We have examined the effect of male sexual hormones on the regeneration of skeletal muscles. Degeneration/regeneration of the left soleus and extensor digitorum longus muscles (EDL) of Wistar male rats was induced by an injection of snake venom (2 microg, Notechis scutatus scutatus). During the muscle regeneration (25 days), rats were treated with either oil (CON), nandrolone (NAN), NAN combined with exercise (NAN + EXE) or were castrated (CAS).

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During the post-natal period, skeletal muscles undergo important modifications leading to the appearance of different types of myofibers which exhibit distinct contractile and metabolic properties. This maturation process results from the activation of the expression of different sets of contractile proteins and metabolic enzymes, which are specific to the different types of myofibers. The muscle-specific promoter of the aldolase A gene (pM) is expressed mainly in fast-twitch glycolytic fibers in adult body muscles.

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