The impact of methylmercury on 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3-induced transcriptomic responses in dolphin skin cells
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Blake C. Ellis
Abstract
The Atlantic bottlenose dolphin has been the focus of much attention owing to the considerable impact of environmental stress on its health and the associated implications for human health. Here, we used skin cells from the dolphin to investigate the protective role of the vitamin D pathway against environmental stressors. We previously reported that dolphin skin cells respond to 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 (1,25D3), the bioactive metabolite of vitamin D3, by upregulation of the vitamin D receptor (VDR) and expression of several genes. Methylmercury is a highly bioaccumulative environmental stressor of relevance to the dolphin. We currently report that in dolphin cells sublethal concentrations of methylmercury compromise the ability of 1,25D3 to upregulate VDR, to transactivate a vitamin D-sensitive promoter, and to express specific target genes. These results help elucidate the effects of vitamin D and methylmercury on innate immunity in dolphin skin and potentially in human skin as well, considering similarities in the vitamin D pathway between the two species.
©2010 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin New York
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- EDITORIAL
- Highlight: Signal Transduction and Disease
- HIGHLIGHT: SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION AND DISEASE
- Phosphorylase and the origin of reversible protein phosphorylation
- β-Catenin as a multilayer modulator of zonal cytochrome P450 expression in mouse liver
- Glycome profiling using modern glycomics technology: technical aspects and applications
- Ubiquitin ligase complexes: from substrate selectivity to conjugational specificity
- MAP3K1 functionally interacts with Axin1 in the canonical Wnt signalling pathway
- Signal transduction by the atopy-associated human thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP) receptor depends on Janus kinase function
- GENES AND NUCLEIC ACIDS
- 6S RNA-dependent inhibition of RNA polymerase is released by RNA-dependent synthesis of small de novo products
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- Analysis of the DNA-binding activity of p53 mutants using functional protein microarrays and its relationship to transcriptional activation
- Peptides from the Mycobacterium tuberculosis Rv1980c protein involved in human cell infection: insights into new synthetic subunit vaccine candidates
- The epimerase activity of anthocyanidin reductase from Vitis vinifera and its regiospecific hydride transfers
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