Rat tibial growth plates have X-ray opaque tethers that link the epiphysis and metaphysis and increase with age as the growth plate (GP) becomes thinner. To determine if tether formation is a regulated process of GP maturation, we tested the hypotheses that tether properties and distribution can be quantified by micro-computed tomography (microCT), that rachitic GPs typical of vitamin D receptor knockout (VDR(-/-)) mice have fewer tethers and altered tether distribution, and that tether formation is regulated by signaling via the VDR. Distal femoral GPs from VDR(+/+) and VDR(-/-) 8-week-old mice were analyzed with microCT and then processed for decalcified and undecalcified histomorphometry. A wide range of parameters that assessed GP and tether geometry and morphology, along with tether distribution, were measured using both microCT and histology. Growth plates of 10-week-old VDR(+/+) and VDR(-/-) mice on a high-calcium, phosphorus, lactose, and vitamin D(3) rescue diet were also analyzed. Both microCT and histology showed tethers present throughout normal mice GPs, while reduction in tether number and volume percentage occurred in VDR(-/-) GPs with localization to the central region. Decreased shrinkage in the axial direction during decalcified histological processing correlated with tether formation, suggesting mechanical stability due to tethers. Tether formation increased greatly between 8 and 10 weeks. Rescue diets restored VDR(-/-) GP size but not tether volume percentage. Overall, these results demonstrate microCT imaging's utility for analyzing tether formation and suggest that signaling via the VDR plays a pivotal role in tether formation.
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Sci Rep
December 2024
School of Life Sciences, Qilu Normal University, Jinan, 250200, China.
In yeast and mammals, the EXO70 subunit of the exocyst complex plays a key role in mediating the tethering of exocytic vesicles to the plasma membrane (PM). In plants, however, the role of EXO70 in regulating vesicle tethering during exocytosis remains unclear. In land plants, EXO70 has undergone significant evolutionary expansion, resulting in multiple EXO70 paralogues that may allow the exocyst to form various isoforms with specific functions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNucleus
December 2025
Department of Biology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Chromatin is a dynamic polymer in constant motion. These motions are heterogeneous between cells and within individual cell nuclei and are profoundly altered in response to DNA damage. The shifts in chromatin motions following genomic insults depend on the temporal and physical scales considered.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFContact (Thousand Oaks)
December 2024
Institute of Cell Dynamics and Imaging, University of Münster, Münster, Germany.
Lipid droplets frequently form contact sites with the membrane of the vacuole, the lysosome-like organelle in yeast. These vacuole lipid droplet (vCLIP) contact sites respond strongly to metabolic cues: while only a subset of lipid droplets is bound to the vacuole when nutrients are abundant, other metabolic states induce stronger contact site formation. Physical lipid droplet-vacuole binding is related to the process of lipophagy, a lipid droplet-specific form of microautophagy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSmall
December 2024
Department of Physics, Kyoto University, Kyoto, 606-8224, Japan.
The assembly of biological systems forms nonequilibrium patterns with different functionalities through molecular-level communication via stepwise sequential interaction and activation. The mimicking of this molecular signaling offers extensive opportunities to design self-assemblies of bioinspired synthetic nonequilibrium systems to develop molecular robots with active, adaptive, and autonomous behavior. Herein, the design and construction of biomolecular motor system, microtubule (MT)-kinesin based molecular swarm system, are reported through stepwise sequential interactions of DNA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
December 2024
Program in Cellular and Molecular Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Human RAD52 is a prime target for synthetical lethality approaches to treat cancers with deficiency in homologous recombination. Among multiple cellular roles of RAD52, its functions in homologous recombination repair and protection of stalled replication forks appear to substitute those of the tumor suppressor protein BRCA2. However, the mechanistic details of how RAD52 can substitute BRCA2 functions are only beginning to emerge.
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