Publications by authors named "Hayess K"

As the developing brain is exquisitely vulnerable to chemical disturbances, testing for developmental neurotoxicity of a substance is an important aspect of characterizing its tissue specific toxicity. Mouse embryonic stem cells (mESCs) can be differentiated toward a neural phenotype, and this can be used as a model for early brain development. We developed a new in vitro assay using mESCs to predict adverse effects of chemicals and other compounds on neural development - the so-called DNT-EST.

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Mouse embryonic stem cells (mESCs) represent an attractive cellular system for in vitro studies in developmental biology as well as toxicology because of their potential to differentiate into all fetal cell lineages. The present study aims to establish an in vitro system for developmental neurotoxicity testing employing mESCs. We developed a robust and reproducible protocol for fast and efficient differentiation of the mESC line D3 into neural cells, optimized with regard to chemical testing.

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Testing for embryotoxicity in vitro is an attractive alternative to animal experimentation. The embryonic stem cell test (EST) is such a method, and it has been formally validated by the European Centre for the Validation of Alternative Methods. A number of recent studies have underscored the potential of this method.

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There are new challenges for hazard and risk assessment in the chemical industry with regard to REACH legislation in Europe and related activities in the U.S. and Japan, which require the development of novel in vitro models for the molecular characterization of drug- or chemical-related effects replacing conventional animal testing.

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Novel molecular content for fast in vitro strategies in the context of safety tests concerning developmental toxicity has a potential to substantially reduce animal experiments according to the "3R" concept (Reduce/Refine/Replace). Here we present and discuss data from a differential proteomic profiling of samples generated using embryonic stem cell derived in vitro models treated with a set of model substances. Among substance-dependent proteomic changes, potential surrogate markers were some isoforms of heat shock proteins and a component of the Ras pathway, present in several redundant isoforms due to posttranslational modifications.

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Skeletal muscle differentiation is a complex process: It is characterised by changes in gene expression and protein composition. Simultaneously, a dramatic remodelling of the cytoskeleton and associated cell-matrix contacts, the costameres, occurs. The expression and localisation of the protein ponsin at cell-matrix contacts marks the establishment of costameres.

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Aims: Xin is a striated muscle-specific F-actin binding protein that has been implicated in cardiomyopathies. In cardiomyocytes, Xin is localized at intercalated discs (IDs). Mice lacking only two of the three Xin isoforms (XinAB(-/-) mice) develop severe cardiac hypertrophy.

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Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a frequent genetic cardiac disease and the most common cause of sudden cardiac death in young individuals. Most of the currently known HCM disease genes encode sarcomeric proteins. Previous studies have shown an association between CSRP3 missense mutations and either dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) or HCM, but all these studies were unable to provide comprehensive genetic evidence for a causative role of CSRP3 mutations.

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Muscle differentiation requires the transition from motile myoblasts to sessile myotubes and the assembly of a highly regular contractile apparatus. This striking cytoskeletal remodelling is coordinated with a transformation of focal adhesion-like cell-matrix contacts into costameres. To assess mechanisms underlying this differentiation process, we searched for muscle specific-binding partners of paxillin.

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Background: Creatine kinase (CK) links phosphocreatine, an energy storage system, to cellular ATPases. CK activity serves as a temporal and spatial buffer for ATP content, particularly in fast-twitch skeletal muscles. The extraocular muscles are notoriously fast and active, suggesting the need for efficient ATP buffering.

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The sarcomeric M-band is thought to provide a link between the thick and the elastic filament systems. So far, relatively little is known about its structural components and their three-dimensional organisation. Myomesin seems to be an essential component of the M-band, since it is expressed in all types of vertebrate striated muscle fibres investigated and can be found in its mature localisation pattern as soon as the first myofibrils are assembled.

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Muscle-type creatine kinase (MM-CK) is a member of the CK isoenzyme family with key functions in cellular energetics. MM-CK interacts in an isoform-specific manner with the M-band of sarcomeric muscle, where it serves as an efficient intramyofibrillar ATP-regenerating system for the actin-activated myosin ATPase located nearby on both sides of the M-band. Four MM-CK-specific and highly conserved lysine residues are thought to be responsible for the interaction of MM-CK with the M-band.

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The M lines are structural landmarks in striated muscles, necessary for sarcomeric stability and as anchoring sites for the M isoform of creatine kinase (CK-M). These structures, especially prominent in fast skeletal muscles, are missing in rodent extraocular muscle, a particularly fast and active muscle group. In this study, we tested the hypotheses that 1).

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Endothelial expression of matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9), which degrades native type IV collagen, was implicated as a prerequisite for angiogenesis. Therefore, the aim of this study was to determine signaling requirements that regulate MMP-9 expression in endothelial cells. Both, primary and permanent human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC and ECV304, respectively) were stimulated with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) and the cytokine tumor necrosis factor-(alpha) (TNF(alpha)) to induce MMP-9 expression.

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gamma-Filamin, also called ABP-L, is a filamin isoform that is specifically expressed in striated muscles, where it is predominantly localized in myofibrillar Z-discs. A minor fraction of the protein shows subsarcolemmal localization. Although gamma-filamin has the same overall structure as the two other known isoforms, it is the only isoform that carries a unique insertion in its immunoglobulin (Ig)-like domain 20.

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Recently, interest has focused on the human gene encoding the putative protein homologous to VAT-1, the major protein of the synaptic vesicles of the electric organ of the Pacific electric ray Torpedo californica, after it has been localized on chromosome locus 17q21 in a region encompassing the breast cancer gene BRCA1. Chromosomal instability in this region is implicated in inherited predisposition for breast and ovarian cancer. Here we describe isolation and biochemical characterization of a mammalian 48 kDa protein homologous to the VAT-1 protein of Torpedo californica.

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The aim of this study was to investigate different protein kinase inhibitors (secondary metabolite-derived substances, synthetic compounds, and substrate-based peptides) for their potency to inhibit the mammalian small heat shock protein (HSP25) kinase (E.C. 2.

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Characteristic features of mammalian small heat shock proteins are their rapid phosphorylation in response to stress and mitogenic signals and their ability to form multimeric particles of 200-700 kDa and large aggregates up to 5000 kDa. Recently, a chaperoning function and an actin polymerization-inhibiting activity were demonstrated for the recombinant murine and turkey small heat shock protein, respectively. In this paper, we demonstrate that the actin polymerization-inhibiting activity of the murine small heat shock protein HSP25 is dependent on the degree of its phosphorylation and structural organization.

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The dephosphorylation of the mouse small heat shock protein hsp25 within an extract obtained from Ehrlich ascites tumor cells is inhibited by the calcium chelator EGTA and at concentrations of microcystin-LR which are characteristic for inhibition of calcium/calmodulin-dependent (2B type) protein phosphatases. Furthermore, the dephosphorylation of hsp25 in the cell-free system derived from Ehrlich ascites tumor could be increased specifically by addition of the calcium/calmodulin-dependent (2B type) protein phosphatase calcineurin. Dephosphorylation of the heat shock protein hsp25 is also obtained in an in vitro system containing phosphorylated recombinant hsp25, 1 mM Ca2+, calmodulin, and calcineurin specifying hsp25 as the direct substrate for this enzyme.

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The small heat-shock protein hsp25 of the Ehrlich ascites tumor exists in one non-phosphorylated (hsp25/1) and two phosphorylated (hsp25/2, hsp25/3) isoforms. In stationary phase tumor cells, a protein kinase activity was detected which phosphorylates hsp25/1, resulting in the formation of several phosphorylated hsp25 isoforms, including those occurring naturally in the tumor. Cell-free phosphorylation of hsp25 required Mg2+ and ATP and was independent of Ca2+, phosphatidylserine, cAMP and cGMP.

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The inactivation of soybean lipoxygenase-1 and of rabbit reticulocyte lipoxygenase by five selected acetylenic fatty acids was studied. In all cases the inactivation was time-consuming and depended on the concentration of the inactivator. The inactivation kinetics was measured and the data were fitted to a kinetic model based on the assumption of catalytic self-inactivation.

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