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    Myrna Dent

    For several decades, the somatic mutation theory (SMT) has been the dominant paradigm on cancer research, leading to the textbook notion that cancer is fundamentally a genetic disease. However, recent discoveries indicate that mutations,... more
    For several decades, the somatic mutation theory (SMT) has been the dominant paradigm on cancer research, leading to the textbook notion that cancer is fundamentally a genetic disease. However, recent discoveries indicate that mutations, including "oncogenic" ones, are widespread in normal somatic cells, suggesting that mutations may be necessary but not sufficient for cancer to develop. Indeed, a fundamental but as yet unanswered question is whether or not the first step in oncogenesis corresponds to a mutational event. On the other hand, for some time, it has been acknowledged the important role in cancer progression of molecular processes that participate in buffering cellular stress. However, their role is considered secondary or complementary to that of putative oncogenic mutations. Here we present and discuss evidence that cancer may have its origin in epigenetic processes associated with cellular adaptation to stressful conditions, and so it could be a direct consequence of stress-buffering mechanisms that allow cells with aberrant phenotypes (not necessarily associated with genetic mutations) to survive and propagate within the organism. We put forward the hypothesis that there would be an inverse correlation between the activation threshold of the cellular stress responses (CSRs) and the risk of cancer, so that species or individuals with low-threshold CSRs will display a higher incidence or risk of cancer.
    Tissue and urokinase-type plasminogen activators are serine proteases with highly restricted specificity, their best characterised role being to release the broad specificity protease plasmin from inactive plasminogen. It has frequently... more
    Tissue and urokinase-type plasminogen activators are serine proteases with highly restricted specificity, their best characterised role being to release the broad specificity protease plasmin from inactive plasminogen. It has frequently been suggested that these, and similar proteases, are involved in axonal growth and tissue remodelling associated with neural development. To help define what this role might be, we have studied the expression of the plasminogen activators in developing rat nervous tissue. Urokinase-type plasminogen activator mRNA is strongly expressed by many classes of neurons in peripheral and central nervous system. We have analysed its appearance in spinal cord and sensory ganglia, and found the mRNA is detectable by in situ hybridisation very early in neuronal development (by embryonic day 12.5), at a stage compatible with it playing a role in axonal or dendritic growth. Tissue plasminogen activator mRNA, on the other hand, is expressed only by cells of the flo...
    Release of intracellular Ca2+ is triggered by the second messenger inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate, which binds to the inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor and gates the opening of an intrinsic calcium channel in the endoplasmic reticulum.... more
    Release of intracellular Ca2+ is triggered by the second messenger inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate, which binds to the inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor and gates the opening of an intrinsic calcium channel in the endoplasmic reticulum. In order to understand the importance of this mechanism in development, we have examined the distribution of the type 1 inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor during development, in some areas of the rat brain and spinal cord and in peripheral neurons, using in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry. In brain, we find that type 1 inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor is expressed in neurons from very early in development; low levels of expression are first detected after the neurons have migrated to their final positions, when they start to differentiate and begin axonal growth. Increasing levels of expression are observed later in development, during the time of synaptogenesis and dendritic contact. Glial cells do not express type 1 inositol 1,...
    Waddington's epigenetic landscape was introduced in biology for understanding the complex process of metazoan development in an accessible fashion. The epigenetic landscape concept implies the coupling of cell differentiation and... more
    Waddington's epigenetic landscape was introduced in biology for understanding the complex process of metazoan development in an accessible fashion. The epigenetic landscape concept implies the coupling of cell differentiation and tissue/organ morphogenesis under a simple visual metaphor or analogy with significant heuristic value. Yet in recent times the epigenetic landscape has been reduced to an illustration device just for cell differentiation thus diminishing its explanatory power and heuristic value. On the other hand, the current mainstream in cancer research is concentrated on the search for proximate causes but not on achieving a deeper understanding of the phenomenon. Nevertheless an emerging alternative perspective that understands cancer as a problem related to tissue/organ morphology and structural organization is getting wider attention. Within such a perspective here we present and discuss a historically restored, non-reductionist, version of the epigenetic landscape that when applied to the problem of cancer improves our understanding of it as a common biological phenomenon resulting from the uncoupling of morphogenesis and cell differentiation as a consequence of the progressive erosion of the epigenetic landscape. The following discussion aims at finding a general framework, not dependent on proximate causes, for understanding the phenomenon of cancer and suggests new research strategies on this problem but away from the current emphasis on the putative genetic causes of cancer.
    Mammalian brain possesses ryanodine-sensitive Ca2+ channels, which in muscle cells mediate rapid Ca2+ release from intracellular stores during excitation-contraction coupling. Analysis of bovine brain ryanodine receptor (RyR) channels... more
    Mammalian brain possesses ryanodine-sensitive Ca2+ channels, which in muscle cells mediate rapid Ca2+ release from intracellular stores during excitation-contraction coupling. Analysis of bovine brain ryanodine receptor (RyR) channels suggests specific expression of the cardiac-muscle RyR isoform in mammalian brain. Localization using cardiac-muscle RyR-specific antibodies and antisense RNA revealed that brain RyRs were present in dendrites, cell bodies and terminals of rat forebrain, and highly enriched in the hippocampus. Activity of skeletal-muscle RyR channels is coupled to sarcolemmal voltage sensors, in contrast with cardiac-muscle RyR channels, which are known to be Ca(2+)-induced Ca(2+)-release channels. Thus Ca(2+)-induced Ca2+ release from intracellular stores mediated by brain RyR channels may be a major Ca(2+)-signalling pathway in specific regions of mammalian brain, and hence may play a fundamental role in neuronal Ca2+ homoeostasis.
    Se presenta un análisis referente al proceso de regeneración de células en el sistema nervioso periférico (SNP), tanto en vertebrados inferiores como en mamíferos adultos; se resaltan los factores de crecimiento de los axones.
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    Aquaporin 1 (AQP1) is a member of a family of small, integral membrane water-transporting proteins, which facilitate water movement across cell membranes in response to osmotic gradients. Several papers have studied the expression and... more
    Aquaporin 1 (AQP1) is a member of a family of small, integral membrane water-transporting proteins, which facilitate water movement across cell membranes in response to osmotic gradients. Several papers have studied the expression and function of the AQPs in the central nervous system. However, little is known about the AQPs in the peripheral nervous system (PNS). In the PNS, AQP1, AQP2 and AQP4 have been reported in both peripheral neurons and glial cells. In this work we studied the expression and localization of AQP1 in the rat sciatic nerve. We found that from the four AQPs we studied (AQP1, AQP2, AQP4 and AQP9) only AQP1 is expressed in the nerve by reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). AQP1 is also observed at the protein level by Western blot analysis. We also studied the localization of AQP1 in the sciatic nerve by immunohistochemistry. The results show that AQP1 is present in both myelinating and non-myelinating Schwann cells. In myelin internodes AQP1 i...
    We have studied the effects of the purified toxin II-10, from the venom of the scorpion Centruroides noxius Hoffmann, on the Na and K currents of voltage clamped squid giant axons. Extracellular applications of 10 microM of toxin II-10... more
    We have studied the effects of the purified toxin II-10, from the venom of the scorpion Centruroides noxius Hoffmann, on the Na and K currents of voltage clamped squid giant axons. Extracellular applications of 10 microM of toxin II-10 produced a selective depression of peak Na currents, with no significant effects on the time course of K currents. On pharmacologically separated Na currents, low concentrations of toxin II-10 (0.28-1 microM) caused a reversible decrease in inward and outward peak INa, with little effect on either the maintained level of the currents or their turning-off. At high concentrations (greater than 3 microM), toxin II-10 drastically reduced the peak conductance and increased both the level of the maintained conductance, and the time course of its turning-off. It is suggested that, when applied extracellularly on squid axons, toxin II-10 primarily reduces the peak Na conductance by modifying the activation of fast-inactivating Na channels. At high concentrati...
    In metazoan cells during the interphase nuclear DNA is organized in supercoiled, topologically constrained loops anchored to a proteinaceous compartment or substructure commonly known as the nuclear matrix (NM). The DNA-NM interactions... more
    In metazoan cells during the interphase nuclear DNA is organized in supercoiled, topologically constrained loops anchored to a proteinaceous compartment or substructure commonly known as the nuclear matrix (NM). The DNA-NM interactions result from a thermodynamically-driven process leading to the necessary dissipation of structural stress along chromosomal DNA, otherwise the chromosomes would break into pieces. Such DNA-NM interactions define a nuclear higher-order structure that is independent of chromatin proteins. On the other hand, a metazoan cell no longer able to undergo mitosis is defined as post-mitotic and this condition indicates a terminally differentiated cell that may survive in such a state for indefinite time. The non-reversible nature of the post-mitotic state suggests a non-genetic basis for it since no spontaneous or induced mutations can revert it. Yet in individual cells the loss of proliferative potential has both a developmental and a stochastic component. Here we discuss evidence suggesting that the stability of the nuclear higher-order structure is the factor that links the stochastic and developmental components leading to the post-mitotic state.
    Inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptors (IP3R) are modulated by the second messenger IP3, which induces intracellular calcium release. Using immunohistochemical techniques, we show that the three isoforms are expressed in sciatic nerve.... more
    Inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptors (IP3R) are modulated by the second messenger IP3, which induces intracellular calcium release. Using immunohistochemical techniques, we show that the three isoforms are expressed in sciatic nerve. IP3R1 and IP3R2 are mainly present in the nucleus of Schwann cells. IP3R1 is also expressed in Schmidt-Lanterman incisures. IP3R3 is primarily localized at very high levels in nonmyelinating Schwann cells. Interestingly, the three isoforms are expressed at the nodes of Ranvier. IP3R1 is clustered at the node of Ranvier, in a distribution that is similar to the Nav1.6 sodium channels in the sciatic nerve. IP3R3 is present in the paranodal regions of the nodes. IP3R2 is concentrated in the vicinity of the node, and the outer Schwann cell cytoplasm similar to the Kv1.5 potassium channel.
    The gene p53 has been fashioned as the guardian of the genome and as prototype of the tumour suppressor gene (TSG) whose function must be inactivated in order for tumours to develop. The ubiquitous expression of truncated p53 protein... more
    The gene p53 has been fashioned as the guardian of the genome and as prototype of the tumour suppressor gene (TSG) whose function must be inactivated in order for tumours to develop. The ubiquitous expression of truncated p53 protein isoforms, results in "premature ageing" of laboratory mouse strains engineered for expressing such isoforms. These facts have been construed in the argument that p53 evolved in order to protect organisms with renewable tissues from developing cancer yet, because p53 is also an inducer of cellular senescence or apoptosis after extensive DNA damage, it becomes a limiting factor for tissue renewal by depleting tissues from stem/precursor cells thus leading to whole-organism ageing. From that point of view p53 displays antagonist pleiotropy contributing to the establishment of degenerative diseases and ageing. Therefore, tumour suppression becomes a balancing act between cancer prevention and ageing. Nevertheless, here we present current evidence showing that the aforementioned argument is rather inconsistent and unwarranted on evolutionary grounds. The evolutionary perspective indicates that p53 evolved so as to play a subtle but very important role during development while its role as a TSG is only important in animals that are protected from most sources of extrinsic mortality, thus suggesting that p53 was primarily selected for its developmental role and not as a TSG. Therefore no real antagonist pleiotropy can be attached to p53 functions and their relationship with whole-organism ageing might be a laboratory artefact.
    In the mammalian liver the quiescent primary hepatocytes preserve a proliferating potential in vivo, yet natural aging correlates with loss of proliferating potential and progression towards terminal differentiation of the hepatocytes.... more
    In the mammalian liver the quiescent primary hepatocytes preserve a proliferating potential in vivo, yet natural aging correlates with loss of proliferating potential and progression towards terminal differentiation of the hepatocytes. Thus aged, terminally-differentiated hepatocytes may survive in a de facto post-mitotic state, similarly to early post-mitotic cells, like neurons, suggesting that there might be a common factor linking both cellular states. In the interphase of metazoan cells the nuclear DNA is organized in supercoiled loops anchored to a proteinaceous substructure known as the nuclear matrix (NM). The DNA-NM interactions define a higher-order structure in the cell nucleus (NHOS). Natural aging of the rat liver correlates with a progressive strengthening of the NM framework and the stabilization of the DNA-NM interactions in the hepatocytes indicating that the NHOS becomes highly stable with age. We compared the NHOS of post-mitotic rat neurons with that of aged rat hepatocytes. Our results indicate that a very stable NHOS is a common feature of both aged and post-mitotic cells in vivo.