Cliff Ji-Fan Lin
National Defense Medical Center
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Featured researches published by Cliff Ji-Fan Lin.
Developmental Dynamics | 2004
Aseervatham Anusha Amali; Cliff Ji-Fan Lin; Yi-Hsuan Chen; Wei-Lun Wang; Hong-Yi Gong; C.Y. Lee; Yen-Lin Ko; Jenn-Khan Lu; Guor Mour Her; Thomas T. Chen; Jen-Leih Wu
Myostatin, a secreted growth and differentiation factor (GDF‐8) belongs to transforming growth factor (TGF‐β) superfamily that plays as a negative regulator of skeletal muscle development and growth. Recently, myostatin has been isolated from fish; however, its role in muscle development and growth remains unknown. Here, we present the expression of myostatin during development and the effects of its knock‐down on various genes such as muscle regulatory transcription factors (MRFs), muscle‐specific proteins (MSP), and insulin‐like growth factors (IGFs). The myostatin expression was found to be maternal as it starts in one‐cell stage onward. The reverse transcription‐polymerase chain reaction (RT‐PCR), in situ hybridization, and Southern and Northern blots demonstrated that the myostatin expression is not only restricted to skeletal muscle, but it expressed all the tested tissues. Expression of myostatin was effected by using antisense morpholinos resulted in significant phenotypic difference in stages 18 and 20 hours postfertilization (hpf). To confirm the specificity of myostatin morpholino, furthermore, a rescue experiment was conducted. The length as well as width of somites was increased with almost no gap in between the somites. In addition, it deserves to mention that this is a first animal model that shows changes in the size of the somites. Moreover, analyses of MRFs, MSP, and IGFs in the knock‐down embryos by RT‐PCR revealed the up‐regulation of MyoD, Myogenin, and Mck transcription, whereas IGF‐2 transcription showed mild response with no effect on IGF‐1, Desmin, and Myf5. In situ hybridization showed that there was an increase in the number of somites from 3 to 4 at 13 and 22 hpf. Taken together, these data suggest that myostatin plays a major role during myogenesis, apart from inhibition of proliferation as well as differentiation. Developmental Dynamics 229:847‐856, 2004.
Development | 2004
Jiann Ruey Hong; Gen Hwa Lin; Cliff Ji-Fan Lin; Wan Ping Wang; Chien Chung Lee; Tai Lang Lin; Jen-Leih Wu
During development, the role of the phosphatidylserine receptor (PSR) in the removal of apoptotic cells that have died is poorly understood. We have investigated this role of PSR in developing zebrafish. Programmed cell death began during the shield stage, with dead cells being engulfed by a neighboring cell that showed a normal-looking nucleus and the nuclear condensation multi-micronuclei of an apoptotic cell. The zebrafish PSR engulfing receptor was cloned (zfpsr), and its nucleotide sequence was compared with corresponding sequences in Drosophila melanogaster (76% identity), human (74%), mouse (72%) and Caenorhabditis elegans (60%). The PSR receptor contained a jmjC domain (residues 143-206) that is a member of the cupin metalloenzyme superfamily, but in this case serves an as yet unknown function(s). psr knockdown by a PSR morpholino oligonucleotide led to accumulation of a large number of dead apoptotic cells in whole early embryo. These cells interfered with embryonic cell migration. In addition, normal development of the somite, brain, heart and notochord was sequentially disrupted up to 24 hours post-fertilization. Development could be rescued in defective embryos by injecting psr mRNA. These results are consistent with a PSR-dependent system in zebrafish embryos that engulfs apoptotic cells mediated by PSR-phagocytes during development, with the system assuming an important role in the normal development of tissues such as the brain, heart, notochord and somite.
Physiological and Biochemical Zoology | 2002
Ching-Feng Weng; Chia-Chang Chiang; Hong-Yi Gong; Mark Hung-Chih Chen; Cliff Ji-Fan Lin; Wei-Tung Huang; Ching-Yi Cheng; Pung-Pung Hwang; Jen-Leih Wu
Some freshwater (FW) teleosts are capable of acclimating to seawater (SW) when challenged; however, the related energetic and physiological consequences are still unclear. This study was conducted to examine the changes in expression of gill Na+‐K+‐ATPase and creatine kinase (CK) in tilapia (Oreochromis mossambicus) as the acute responses to transfer from FW to SW. After 24 h in 25 ppt SW, gill Na+‐K+‐ATPase activities were higher than those of fish in FW. Fish in 35 ppt SW did not increase gill Na+‐K+‐ATPase activities until 1.5 h after transfer, and then the activities were not significantly different from those of fish in 25 ppt SW. Compared to FW, the gill CK activities in 35 ppt SW declined within 1.5 h and afterward dramatically elevated at 2 h, as in 25 ppt SW, but the levels in 35 ppt SW were lower than those in 25 ppt SW. The Western blot of muscle‐type CK (MM form) was in high association with the salinity change, showing a pattern of changes similar to that in CK activity; however, levels in 35 ppt SW were higher than those in 25 ppt SW. The activity of Na+‐K+‐ATPase highly correlated with that of CK in fish gill after transfer from FW to SW, suggesting that phosphocreatine acts as an energy source to meet the osmoregulatory demand during acute transfer.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2008
Cliff Ji-Fan Lin; Hong-Yi Gong; Hung-Chia Tseng; Wei-Lun Wang; Jen-Leih Wu
Journal of Biomedical Science | 2006
Aseervatham Anusha Amali; Ravikumar Deepa Rekha; Cliff Ji-Fan Lin; Wei-Lun Wang; Hong-Yi Gong; Gour-Mour Her; Jen-Leih Wu
Journal of Biomedical Science | 2008
Aseervatham Anusha Amali; Cliff Ji-Fan Lin; Yi-Hsuan Chen; Wei-Lun Wang; Hong-Yi Gong; Ravikumar Deepa Rekha; Jenn-Kan Lu; Thomas T. Chen; Jen-Leih Wu
Gene | 2004
Hong-Yi Gong; Cliff Ji-Fan Lin; Mark Hung-Chih Chen; Meng-Chuen Hu; Gen-Hwa Lin; Yi Zhou; Leonard I. Zon; Jen-Leih Wu
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2001
Jyh-Yih Chen; Bei-En Chang; Yi-Hsuan Chen; Cliff Ji-Fan Lin; Jen-Leih Wu; Ching-Ming Kuo
Theriogenology | 2007
Wei-Tung Huang; Hao-Cheng Yu; Chih-Chien Hsu; Ching-Fong Liao; Hong-Yi Gong; Cliff Ji-Fan Lin; Jen-Leih Wu; Ching-Feng Weng
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2004
Hong-Yi Gong; Jen-Leih Wu; Wei-Tung Huang; Cliff Ji-Fan Lin; Ching-Feng Weng