Göran Leonardsson
Umeå University
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Featured researches published by Göran Leonardsson.
Endocrinology | 1999
Anna-Carin Hägglund; Annelii Ny; Göran Leonardsson; Tor Ny
At the time of ovulation, proteolytic degradation of the follicular wall is required to release the mature oocyte. Extracellular proteases, such as serine proteases and matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), are thought to play important roles in this process. In this study we have examined the regulation of 11 MMPs and 3 tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases (TIMPs) during gonadotropin-induced ovulation in the mouse. Northern blot hybridization showed that messenger RNA for several MMPs and TIMPs, including gelatinase A, MT1-MMP, stromelysin-3, MMP-19, TIMP-1, TIMP-2, and TIMP-3, were present at detectable levels in the mouse ovary. In addition, ovarian extracts contained gelatinolytic activities corresponding to the inactive proforms of gelatinase A and gelatinase B. Most of the MMPs and TIMPs were expressed at a constitutive level throughout the periovulatory period. However, MMP-19 and TIMP-1 revealed a different expression pattern; they were both induced 5-10 times by hCG and reached their maximum levels at 12 h after hCG treatment, corresponding to the time of ovulation. At this time point, MMP-19 and TIMP-1 messenger RNA were localized to the granulosa and thecal-interstitial cells of large preovulatory and ovulating follicles. This temporal and spatial regulation pattern suggests that MMP-19 might be involved in the tissue degradation that occurs during follicular rupture and that TIMP-1 could have a role in terminating MMP activity after ovulation.
Endocrinology | 1999
Annelii Ny; Göran Leonardsson; Anna-Carin Hägglund; Peter Hägglöf; Victoria A. Ploplis; Peter Carmeliet; Tor Ny
Many different studies suggest that plasmin generated from plasminogen plays a crucial role in the degradation of the follicular wall at the time of ovulation. We have assessed the physiological relevance of plasmin on ovulation by studying plasminogen-deficient mice. Ovulation efficiency (mean number of ova released per mouse) was determined both in a standardized ovulation model in which 25-day-old immature mice were injected with finite amounts of gonadotropins to induce ovulation and during physiological ovulation using adult normally cycling mice. Our results revealed that the temporal onset of follicular wall rupture (first ova observed in bursa or oviduct) was not delayed in plasminogen-deficient mice during gonadotropin-induced ovulation. However, there was a trend toward slightly reduced ovulation efficiency in the plasminogen-deficient mice. This reduction was only 13% and not statistically significant (P = 0.084) and may be connected to a delayed maturation of these mice manifested in reduced body and ovary weights. During physiological ovulation adult plasminogen-deficient mice had normal ovulation efficiency compared with plasminogen wild-type mice. Taken together our results indicate that under the conditions used in this study plasmin is not required for efficient follicular rupture or for activation of other proteases involved in this process. Alternatively, the role of plasmin may be effectively compensated for by other mechanisms in the absence of plasmin.
American Journal of Pathology | 2005
Jinan Li; Annelii Ny; Göran Leonardsson; Kutty Selva Nandakumar; Rikard Holmdahl; Tor Ny
The plasminogen activator (PA) system has been proposed to have important roles in rheumatoid arthritis. Here we have used the autoimmune collagen type II (CII)-induced arthritis (CIA) model and mice deficient for urokinase-type PA (uPA) or plasminogen to investigate the role of the PA system for development of arthritis. Our data revealed that uPA-deficient mice have a lower severity and incidence of CIA than wild-type mice. Furthermore, although >80% of wild-type control mice developed CIA, we found that none of the 50 plasminogen-deficient littermates that were tested developed CIA within a 40-day period. Antibody generation after CII immunization as well as the binding of labeled anti-CII antibodies to the surface of cartilage were similar in wild-type and plasminogen-deficient mice. No sign of inflammation was seen when plasminogen-deficient mice were injected with a mixture of monoclonal antibodies against CII. However, after daily injections of human plasminogen, these mice developed arthritis within 5 days. Our finding that infiltration of inflammatory cells into the synovial joints was impaired in plasminogen-deficient mice suggests that uPA and plasminogen are important mediators of joint inflammation. Active plasmin is therefore essential for the induction of pathological inflammatory joint destruction in CIA.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1993
Monica Ohlsson; Göran Leonardsson; X C Jia; P Feng; Tor Ny
We have characterized tissue type plasminogen activator (tPA) promoter elements and nuclear factors required for follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH)-induced transcription of the rat tPA gene in granulosa cells and constitutive expression of the gene in the rat neuroblastoma cell line B103. Run-on transcription analysis of isolated nuclei revealed that B103 cells transcribe the tPA gene at a high and constitutive level, while FSH was found to induce tPA gene transcription in a rapid and transient manner in granulosa cells. The maximal FSH-induced transcription rate was obtained after 20 min and was similar in the absence or presence of the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide. However, in the presence of cycloheximide, tPA transcription was not turned off but continued at a high rate for several hours. This phenomenon may at least partly explain the earlier finding that tPA mRNA is superinduced by FSH in the presence of cycloheximide. DNase I footprinting analysis of the first 621 bp of the tPA promoter revealed a total of six regions that interact with nuclear factors from B103 and granulosa cells. Deletion of the promoter region from positions -269 to -621, a region that includes the two most-upstream footprints, had no effect on constitutive or FSH-induced transcription in transient expression experiments. Nuclear extracts from both granulosa cells and B103 cells showed strong binding to a consensus cyclic AMP-responsive element (CRE) at positions -178 to -185 and a neighboring binding site for nuclear factor 1 (NF1) at positions -145 to -158. The factors binding to these two regions were identified as members of the CRE-binding protein and NF1 families of transcription factors, respectively. Footprints were also obtained over two GC boxes at positions -64 to -71 and -41 to -49. These footprints were more pronounced with nuclear extracts from B103 cells than with extracts from untreated or FSH-treated granulosa cells, but gel shift assays indicate that similar amounts of two distinct factors bind to the two GC boxes in both cell types. Transfection experiments using promoter constructs with inactivated promoter elements indicate that both the CRE and NF1 sites contribute to the FSH responsiveness of the rat tPA gene in granulosa cells, while only the NF1 site is important for constitutive expression in B103 cells. The two GC boxes were found to be necessary both for constitutive expression in B103 cells and for FSH-induced expression in granulosa cells, and inactivation of both GC boxes essentially eliminated the tPA promoter activity in both cell types.
Fibrinolysis and Proteolysis | 1989
Tor Ny; L. Hansson; D Lawrence; Göran Leonardsson; Birger Åstedt
Plasminogen activator inhibitor type 2 cDNA transfected into Chinese hamster ovary cells is stably expressed but not secreted
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1995
Göran Leonardsson; X R Peng; K Liu; L Nordström; Peter Carmeliet; Richard C. Mulligan; Desire Collen; Tor Ny
DNA and Cell Biology | 1988
Tor Ny; Göran Leonardsson; Aaron J. W. Hsueh
FEBS Journal | 1995
Monica Holmberg; Göran Leonardsson; Tor Ny
Developmental Biology | 2006
Kui Liu; Patrik Wahlberg; Göran Leonardsson; Anna-Carin Hägglund; Annelii Ny; Ida Bodén; Carin Wibom; Leif R. Lund; Tor Ny
FEBS Journal | 1997
Göran Leonardsson; Tor Ny