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Dive into the research topics where Jane M. Moseley is active.

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Featured researches published by Jane M. Moseley.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1986

Abundant calcitonin receptors in isolated rat osteoclasts. Biochemical and autoradiographic characterization.

Geoffrey C. Nicholson; Jane M. Moseley; P.M. Sexton; F.A.O. Mendelsohn; T. J. Martin

Calcitonin receptors have been characterized for the first time in isolated osteoclasts. These receptors have been demonstrated by autoradiographic and biochemical methods, and the cells have also been shown to respond to calcitonin with a dose-dependent increase in cyclic AMP. The receptors in rat osteoclasts are specific and of high affinity (dissociation constant, Kd, 1 to 6 X 10(-10) M), and are present in greater numbers than in any cell previously studied (greater than 10(6) per cell). Chemical cross-linking of 125I-labeled salmon calcitonin to osteoclasts using disuccinimidyl suberate resulted in identification of a receptor component with a relative molecular weight of 80,000-90,000. By counting grains in autoradiographic experiments, we found that greater than 80% of specifically bound radioactivity was associated with multinucleate osteoclasts and the remainder was associated with mononuclear cells that are not osteoblasts, but that may be osteoclast precursors.


Nature | 2000

Genetic ablation of parathyroid glands reveals another source of parathyroid hormone.

Thomas Günther; Zhou-Feng Chen; Jaesang Kim; Matthias Priemel; Johannes M. Rueger; Michael Amling; Jane M. Moseley; T. John Martin; David J. Anderson; Gerard Karsenty

The parathyroid glands are the only known source of circulating parathyroid hormone (PTH), which initiates an endocrine cascade that regulates serum calcium concentration. Glial cells missing2 (Gcm2), a mouse homologue of Drosophila Gcm, is the only transcription factor whose expression is restricted to the parathyroid glands. Here we show that Gcm2-deficient mice lack parathyroid glands and exhibit a biological hypoparathyroidism, identifying Gcm2 as a master regulatory gene of parathyroid gland development. Unlike PTH receptor-deficient mice, however, Gcm2-deficient mice are viable and fertile, and have only a mildly abnormal bone phenotype. Despite their lack of parathyroid glands, Gcm2-deficient mice have PTH serum levels identical to those of wild-type mice, as do parathyroidectomized wild-type animals. Expression and ablation studies identified the thymus, where Gcm1, another Gcm homologue, is expressed, as the additional, downregulatable source of PTH. Thus, Gcm2 deletion uncovers an auxiliary mechanism for the regulation of calcium homeostasis in the absence of parathyroid glands. We propose that this backup mechanism may be a general feature of endocrine regulation.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1985

Calcitonin gene-related peptide stimulates cyclic AMP formation in rat aortic smooth muscle cells.

M. Kubota; Jane M. Moseley; L. Butera; G.J. Dusting; P. Macdonald; T. J. Martin

In rat aortic smooth muscle cells in culture, calcitonin gene-related peptide stimulated cAMP formation in a dose-dependent manner, half-maximally effective at 0.5 to 1 nM. There was no effect on formation of cGMP, which was increased 300-fold in the same experiments by atriopeptin or sodium nitroprusside. The vasodilator effect of CGRP in rat aorta requires an intact endothelium, indicating that increase in vascular smooth muscle cAMP is not in itself sufficient to bring about relaxation. cAMP is probably a mediator of CGRP action in vascular smooth muscle.


Breast Cancer Research | 2006

Tumor-specific expression of αvβ3 integrin promotes spontaneous metastasis of breast cancer to bone

Erica K. Sloan; Normand Pouliot; Kym Stanley; Jenny Chia; Jane M. Moseley; Daphne K. Hards; Robin L. Anderson

IntroductionStudies in xenograft models and experimental models of metastasis have implicated several β3 integrin-expressing cell populations, including endothelium, platelets and osteoclasts, in breast tumor progression. Since orthotopic human xenograft models of breast cancer are poorly metastatic to bone and experimental models bypass the formation of a primary tumor, however, the precise contribution of tumor-specific αvβ3 to the spontaneous metastasis of breast tumors from the mammary gland to bone remains unclear.MethodsWe used a syngeneic orthotopic model of spontaneous breast cancer metastasis to test whether exogenous expression of αvβ3 in a mammary carcinoma line (66cl4) that metastasizes to the lung, but not to bone, was sufficient to promote its spontaneous metastasis to bone from the mammary gland. The tumor burden in the spine and the lung following inoculation of αvβ3-expressing 66cl4 (66cl4beta3) tumor cells or control 66cl4pBabe into the mammary gland was analyzed by real-time quantitative PCR. The ability of these cells to grow and form osteolytic lesions in bone was determined by histology and tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase staining of bone sections following intratibial injection of tumor cells. The adhesive, migratory and invasive properties of 66cl4pBabe and 66cl4beta3 cells were evaluated in standard in vitro assays.ResultsThe 66cl4beta3 tumors showed a 20-fold increase in metastatic burden in the spine compared with 66cl4pBabe. A similar trend in lung metastasis was observed. αvβ3 did not increase the proliferation of 66cl4 cells in vitro or in the mammary gland in vivo. Similarly, αvβ3 is not required for the proliferation of 66cl4 cells in bone as both 66cl4pBabe and 66cl4beta3 proliferated to the same extent when injected directly into the tibia. 66cl4beta3 tumor growth in the tibia, however, increased osteoclast recruitment and bone resorption compared with 66cl4 tumors. Moreover, αvβ3 increased 66cl4 tumor cell adhesion and αvβ3-dependent haptotactic migration towards bone matrix proteins, as well as their chemotactic response to bone-derived soluble factors in vitro.ConclusionThese results demonstrate for the first time that tumor-specific αvβ3 contributes to spontaneous metastasis of breast tumors to bone and suggest a critical role for this receptor in mediating chemotactic and haptotactic migration towards bone factors.


The Lancet | 1979

1,25-DIHYDROXYVITAMIN-D RECEPTOR IN BREAST CANCER CELLS

J.A. Eisman; I. Macintyre; T. J. Martin; Jane M. Moseley

A specific receptor for 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D has been demonstrated in a cultured human breast cancer cell line. This is the first such demonstration in any cancer cell. It may explain the high incidence of metastatic bone destruction and hypercalcaemia in this common malignancy, and the limited success of other steroid-receptor assays in predicting the response of breast cancer to therapy.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 1996

Expression of parathyroid hormone‐related protein in cells of osteoblast lineage

Naoto Suda; Matthew T. Gulespie; Kathy Traianedes; Hong Zhou; Patricia W. M. Ho; Daphne K. Hards; Elizabeth H. Allan; T. John Martin; Jane M. Moseley

The expression of parathyroid hormone‐related protein (PTHrP) was studied in a range of cell cultures representative of the osteoblast lineage and in rat calvarial sections. Primary newborn rat calvarial cells, a rat preosteoblastic cell line (UMR 201), a mouse stromal cell line (ST 2), a mouse calvaria‐derived osteoblastic cell line (KS 4), and rat osteosarcoma cell lines (UMR 106‐01 and ‐06), all expressed PTHrP when examined by reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT‐PCR). Using a radioimmunoassay we also demonstrated PTHrP in the conditioned medium of the cultured cells, with the exception of UMR 106‐01 and ‐06 cells. Treatment of UMR 201 cells with all‐trans‐retinoic acid which induces them to acquire a more differentiated phenotype, also led to a time‐dependent decrease in PTHrP mRNA levels as determined by RT‐PCR, Northern blot analysis, and in situ hybridization. Decreased PTHrP levels in the conditioned medium of the treated cells was also observed. These results suggested that PTHrP production might be greater in less mature osteoblasts. Examination of the populations obtained from newborn rat calvariae by sequential collagenase digestion revealed that the early digests exhibited low ALP activity, low expression of PTH/PTHrP receptor mRNA, and no adenylate cyclase response to PTHrP(1–34). These populations showed the highest level of mRNA and production of PTHrP. Cells from later digests, the “osteoblast‐rich” populations, had reduced PTHrP expression. Immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization in sections of newborn rat calvariae showed PTHrp expression in cuboidal osteoblasts located adjacent to bone and in spindle‐shaped cells in the periosteal region. It is concluded that PTHrP is produced by cells of the osteoblast lineage, supporting the hypothesis that PTHrP may function physiologically as a paracrine factor in bone.


Bone | 1997

Temporal expression of PTHrP during endochondral bone formation in mouse and intramembranous bone formation in an in vivo rabbit model

Vicky Kartsogiannis; Jane M. Moseley; B. McKelvie; S.T. Chou; D.K. Hards; Kong Wah Ng; T. J. Martin; Hong Zhou

Expression of parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP) messenger RNA (mRNA) and protein was investigated throughout the developmental progression of endochondral bone formation in mouse and intramembranous bone formation in an in vivo model in rabbit, using in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry. Endochondral bone formation was investigated in a developing embryo, newborn, and adult mouse. In fetal long bones through to newborn (day 7), PTHrP mRNA and protein were consistently expressed in chondrocytes within the proliferative, transitional, and hypertrophic zones. In addition, high levels of PTHrP were also detected in osteoblasts on the surface of trabecular bone surfaces. Similarly, at the adult stage (week 7), PTHrP mRNA and protein were consistently expressed in chondrocytes at epiphyseal ends of the subarticular cartilage, within cortical periosteum, as well as in osteoblasts located at the metaphyseal trabecular bone surfaces. Using an in vivo intramembranous bone formation model in rabbits, expression of PTHrP mRNA and protein was demonstrated in preosteoblasts prior to trabecular bone formation (1-week bone harvest). As bone formed (2-, 3-, and 4-week bone tissue harvests), PTHrP mRNA and protein were highly expressed in actively synthesizing osteoblasts and in those osteocytes embedded within the superficial layers of the bone matrix. Lining osteoblasts and osteocytes buried deeply in the bone matrix displayed weak or no signal for PTHrP. The pattern of spatial and temporal expression of PTHrP demonstrated in cartilage cells and osteoblasts in the two systems suggests an important role of PTHrP in both endochondral and intramembranous bone formation.


Neuroscience | 1986

Localization of binding sites for calcitonin gene-related peptide in rat brain by in vitro autoradiography

P.M. Sexton; John S. McKenzie; R.T. Mason; Jane M. Moseley; T. J. Martin; Frederick A.O. Mendelsohn

The distribution of binding sites for calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) in rat brain were studied using in vitro autoradiography. In a radioreceptor assay using [125I]human calcitonin gene-related peptide as the radioligand, with cerebellar cortical membranes, rat calcitonin gene-related peptide had a binding affinity constant of 1.16 +/- 0.23 X 10(10) M-1 and a site concentration of 43.4 +/- 3.4 fmol/mg protein. In this system, human calcitonin gene-related peptide had a binding affinity constant of 3.9 +/- 0.7 X 10(9) M-1 whereas salmon calcitonin was very weak with a binding affinity constant of only 6.8 +/- 4.0 X 10(5) M-1. CGRP binding localized by in vitro autoradiography, using [125I]rat calcitonin gene-related peptide, had a characteristic distinct distribution in the rat brain. There were high concentrations of binding found over the accumbens nucleus, the organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis, ventral caudate putamen, median eminence, the arcuate nucleus, lateral amygdaloid nucleus and lateral mammillary nucleus, the superior and inferior colliculi, pontine nuclei, molecular and Purkinje cell layers of the cerebellar cortex, the nucleus of the solitary tract, the inferior olivary nuclei, hypoglossal complex and the vestibular and cochlear nuclei. The distribution of these binding sites suggests multiple roles for CGRP in the central nervous system including auditory, visual, gustatory and somatosensory processing, and in neuroendocrine control.


Clinical Endocrinology | 1992

Parathyroid hormone-related protein: a possible endocrine function in lactation

Vivian Grill; Janet Hillary; Patricia M. W. Ho; Frieda M. K. Law; Richard J. MacIsaac; Ian A. Maclsaac; Jane M. Moseley; T. John Martin

OBJECTIVE Parathyroid hormone‐related protein (PTHrP), initially discovered as the factor responsible for the syndrome of humoral hypercalcaemia of malignancy, has also been found to be expressed in placenta, in pregnant uterus, in the fetus at many locations, and in the lactating mammary gland. This study sought to establish whether PTHrP reaches the maternal circulation when it is expressed in mammary tissue during lactation or in the maternal reproductive tract during gestation.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2001

Fetal parathyroids are not required to maintain placental calcium transport.

Christopher S. Kovacs; Nancy R. Manley; Jane M. Moseley; T. John Martin; Henry M. Kronenberg

We used Hoxa3 knockout mice and other mouse models to study the role of the fetal parathyroids in fetal calcium homeostasis. Hoxa3-null fetuses lack parathyroid glands, and absence of parathyroid hormone (PTH) was confirmed with a rodent PTH immunoradiometric assay. The ionized calcium level of Hoxa3-null fetuses was significantly lower than that of wild-type or heterozygous littermates or of the mother. Both the rate of placental calcium transfer and the plasma PTHrP level were normal in Hoxa3 mutants and their heterozygous siblings. Because we had previously observed an increase in placental calcium transfer in PTH/PTHrP receptor 1-null (Pthr1-null) fetuses, we assayed plasma PTHrP in those mice. Pthr1-null fetuses had plasma PTHrP levels 11-fold higher than those of their littermates. Northern analysis, immunohistochemical, and in situ hybridization studies of Pthr1-null fetuses indicated that liver and placenta had increased expression of PTHRP: In summary, loss of fetal parathyroids in Hoxa3-null fetuses caused marked hypocalcemia but did not alter placental calcium transfer or the circulating PTHrP level. The findings in the Pthr1-null fetuses indicate that several tissues may contribute to the circulating PTHrP level in fetal mice.

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T. J. Martin

St. Vincent's Institute of Medical Research

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T. John Martin

St. Vincent's Institute of Medical Research

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Bruce E. Kemp

Repatriation General Hospital

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Patricia W. M. Ho

St. Vincent's Institute of Medical Research

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Matthew T. Gillespie

St. Vincent's Institute of Medical Research

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Gregory E. Rice

Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital

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