Publications by authors named "G Flores-Delgado"

The secretion and management of readily transportable airway surface liquid (ASL) along the respiratory tract is crucial for the clearance of debris and pathogens from the lungs. In proximal large airways, submucosal glands (SMGs) can produce ASL. However, in distal small airways, SMGs are absent, although the lumens of these airways are, uniquely, highly plicated.

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Protein phosphatase 1 (PP1) catalytic subunits typically combine with other proteins that modulate their activity, direct them to distinct substrates, or serve as substrates for PP1. More than 50 PP1-interacting proteins (PIPs) have been identified so far. Given there are approximately 10 000 phosphoproteins in mammals, many PIPs remain to be discovered.

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Estrogen action and tuberin function has been suggested to play a crucial role in the proliferation of lung smooth muscle-like cells and/or myofibroblasts in pulmonary lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM). Tuberin is a tumor suppressor phosphoprotein, which also regulates fluid phase endocytosis. Its activity, turnover and complex association with hamartin depends on its phosphorylation status.

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Recent studies have suggested that the antiproliferative effects of E2 may be mediated through a nongenomic action. Herein, we asked whether nongenomic estrogen action regulates phosphorylation of Raf1 and ERK1/2 mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase in lung myofibroblasts. We demonstrated that lung myofibroblasts, incubated in the presence of E2, showed a rapid phosphorylation on serine-259 of Raf1 and tyrosine-204 of ERK1/2 MAP kinase at 15 min, by approximately 3- and 5-fold, respectively.

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To form a diffusible interface large enough to conduct respiratory gas exchange with the circulation, the lung endoderm undergoes extensive branching morphogenesis and alveolization, coupled with angiogenesis and vasculogenesis. It is becoming clear that many of the key factors determining the process of branching morphogenesis, particularly of the respiratory organs, are highly conserved through evolution. Synthesis of information from null mutations in Drosophila and mouse indicates that members of the sonic hedgehog/patched/smoothened/Gli/FGF/FGFR/sprouty pathway are functionally conserved and extremely important in determining respiratory organogenesis through mesenchymal-epithelial inductive signaling, which induces epithelial proliferation, chemotaxis and organ-specific gene expression.

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