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1.
Sci Rep ; 6: 32168, 2016 08 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27577960

ABSTRACT

Biomaterial development for tissue engineering applications is rapidly increasing but necessitates efficacy and safety testing prior to clinical application. Current in vitro and in vivo models hold a number of limitations, including expense, lack of correlation between animal models and human outcomes and the need to perform invasive procedures on animals; hence requiring new predictive screening methods. In the present study we tested the hypothesis that the chick embryo chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) can be used as a bioreactor to culture and study the regeneration of human living bone. We extracted bone cylinders from human femoral heads, simulated an injury using a drill-hole defect, and implanted the bone on CAM or in vitro control-culture. Micro-computed tomography (µCT) was used to quantify the magnitude and location of bone volume changes followed by histological analyses to assess bone repair. CAM blood vessels were observed to infiltrate the human bone cylinder and maintain human cell viability. Histological evaluation revealed extensive extracellular matrix deposition in proximity to endochondral condensations (Sox9+) on the CAM-implanted bone cylinders, correlating with a significant increase in bone volume by µCT analysis (p < 0.01). This human-avian system offers a simple refinement model for animal research and a step towards a humanized in vivo model for tissue engineering.


Subject(s)
Biological Assay , Bone Regeneration , Chorioallantoic Membrane/metabolism , Femur/metabolism , Models, Biological , Tissue Engineering/methods , Animals , Chick Embryo , Femur/transplantation , Heterografts , Humans
2.
J Biol Chem ; 288(45): 32797-32808, 2013 Nov 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24078633

ABSTRACT

MHC class I molecules display peptides at the cell surface to cytotoxic T cells. The co-factor tapasin functions to ensure that MHC I becomes loaded with high affinity peptides. In most mammals, the tapasin gene appears to have little sequence diversity and few alleles and is located distal to several classical MHC I loci, so tapasin appears to function in a universal way to assist MHC I peptide loading. In contrast, the chicken tapasin gene is tightly linked to the single dominantly expressed MHC I locus and is highly polymorphic and moderately diverse in sequence. Therefore, tapasin-assisted loading of MHC I in chickens may occur in a haplotype-specific way, via the co-evolution of chicken tapasin and MHC I. Here we demonstrate a mechanistic basis for this co-evolution, revealing differences in the ability of two chicken MHC I alleles to bind and release peptides in the presence or absence of tapasin, where, as in mammals, efficient self-loading is negatively correlated with tapasin-assisted loading. We found that a polymorphic residue in the MHC I α3 domain thought to bind tapasin influenced both tapasin function and intrinsic peptide binding properties. Differences were also evident between the MHC alleles in their interactions with tapasin. Last, we show that a mismatched combination of tapasin and MHC alleles exhibit significantly impaired MHC I maturation in vivo and that polymorphic MHC residues thought to contact tapasin influence maturation efficiency. Collectively, this supports the possibility that tapasin and BF2 proteins have co-evolved, resulting in allele-specific peptide loading in vivo.


Subject(s)
Alleles , Evolution, Molecular , Genetic Loci/physiology , Histocompatibility Antigens Class I/genetics , Membrane Transport Proteins/genetics , Animals , Chickens , Histocompatibility Antigens Class I/immunology , Humans , Membrane Transport Proteins/immunology , Protein Structure, Tertiary
3.
EMBO J ; 28(23): 3730-44, 2009 Dec 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19851281

ABSTRACT

Calreticulin is a lectin chaperone of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). In calreticulin-deficient cells, major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules travel to the cell surface in association with a sub-optimal peptide load. Here, we show that calreticulin exits the ER to accumulate in the ER-Golgi intermediate compartment (ERGIC) and the cis-Golgi, together with sub-optimally loaded class I molecules. Calreticulin that lacks its C-terminal KDEL retrieval sequence assembles with the peptide-loading complex but neither retrieves sub-optimally loaded class I molecules from the cis-Golgi to the ER, nor supports optimal peptide loading. Our study, to the best of our knowledge, demonstrates for the first time a functional role of intracellular transport in the optimal loading of MHC class I molecules with antigenic peptide.


Subject(s)
Calreticulin/physiology , H-2 Antigens/metabolism , Peptides/metabolism , Signal Transduction/physiology , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , COS Cells , Calreticulin/metabolism , Cell Line, Tumor , Chlorocebus aethiops , Cricetinae , Endoplasmic Reticulum/metabolism , Golgi Apparatus/metabolism , Humans , Mice , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Protein Binding/physiology , Protein Transport/physiology , Rats
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