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Dive into the research topics where Marcia Urban is active.

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Featured researches published by Marcia Urban.


Brain Research Reviews | 2000

Temporal expression of neuronal connexins during hippocampal ontogeny

Renato Rozental; Miduturu Srinivas; S. Gökhan; Marcia Urban; Rolf Dermietzel; John A. Kessler; David C. Spray; Mark F. Mehler

Communication through gap junction channels provides a major signaling mechanism during early brain histogenesis, a developmental time during which neural progenitor cells are inexcitable and do not express ligand-gated channel responses to the major CNS neurotransmitters. Expression of different gap junction types during neurogenesis may therefore define intercellular pathways for transmission of developmentally relevant molecules. To better understand the molecular mechanism(s) by which growth and differentiation of neurons are modulated by gap junction channels, we have been examining the developmental effects of a specific set of cytokines on differentiation and gap junction expression in a conditionally immortalized mouse embryonic hippocampal neuronal progenitor cell line (MK31). When multipotent MK31 cells are in an uncommitted state, they uniformly express the neuroepithelial intermediate filament class VI marker, nestin, are strongly coupled by gap junctions composed of connexin43 (Cx43) and express connexin45 (Cx45) at the mRNA level. As these cells undergo neuronal lineage commitment and exit from cell cycle, they begin to express the early neurofilament marker, NF66, and coupling strength and expression of Cx43 begin to decline with concurrent expression of other connexin proteins, including Cx26, Cx33, Cx36, Cx40 and Cx45. Terminal neuronal differentiation is heralded by the expression of more advanced neurofilament proteins, increased morphologic maturation, the elaboration of inward currents and action potentials that possess mature physiological properties, and changing profiles of expression of connexin subtypes, including upregulation of Cx36 expression. These important developmental transitions are regulated by a complex network of cell cycle checkpoints. To begin to examine the precise roles of gap junction proteins in traversing these developmental checkpoints and in thus regulating neurogenesis, we have focused on individual members of two classes of genes involved in these seminal events: ID (inhibitor of differentiation)-1 and GAS (growth arrest-specific gene)5. When MK31 cells were maintained in an uncommitted state, levels of ID-1 mRNA were high and GAS5 transcripts were essentially undetectable. Application of cytokines that promote neuronal lineage commitment and cell cycle exit resulted in down-regulation of ID-1 and upregulation of GAS5 transcripts, whereas additional cytokine paradigms that promoted terminal neuronal differentiation resulted in the delayed down-regulation of GAS5 mRNA. Stable MK31 transfectants were generated for ID-1 and GAS5. In basal conditions, cellular proliferation was enhanced in the ID-1 transfectants and inhibited in the GAS5 transfectants when compared with control MK31 cells. When cytokine-mediated neurogenesis was examined in these transfected cell lines, constitutive expression of ID-1 inhibited and constitutive expression of GAS5 enhanced initial and terminal stages of neuronal differentiation, with evidence that terminal neuronal maturation in both transfectant lines was associated with decreased cellular viability, possibly due to the presence of conflicting cell cycle-associated developmental signals. These experimental reagents will prove to be valuable experimental tools to help define the functional interrelationships between changing profiles of connexin protein expression and cell cycle regulation during neuronal ontogeny in the mammalian brain. The present review summarizes the current state of research involving the temporal expression of such connexin types in differentiating hippocampal neurons and speculates on the possible role of these intercellular channels in the development and plasticity of the nervous system. In addition, we describe the functional properties and expression pattern of the newly discovered neuronal-specific gap junctional protein, Cx36, in the developing mouse fetal hippocampus and in the rat retina and brain.


Developmental Neuroscience | 2001

Gap Junction-Mediated Bidirectional Signaling between Human Fetal Hippocampal Neurons and Astrocytes

Renato Rozental; Adriana F. Andrade-Rozental; Xin Zheng; Marcia Urban; David C. Spray; Fung Chow Chiu

Gap junctions are clusters of intercellular channels that connect the interiors of coupled cells. In the brain, gap junctions function as electrotonic synapses between neurons and as pathways for the exchange of metabolites and second-messenger molecules between glial cells. Astrocytes, the most abundant glial cell type coupled by gap junctions, are intimately involved in the active control of neuronal activity including synaptic transmission and plasticity. Previous studies have suggested that astrocytic-neuronal signaling may involve gap junction-mediated intercellular connections; this issue remains unresolved. In this study, we demonstrate that second-trimester human fetal hippocampal neurons and astrocytes in culture are coupled by gap junctions bidirectionally; we show that human fetal neurons and astrocytes express both the same and different connexin subtypes. The formation of functional homotypic and heterotypic gap junction channels between neurons and astrocytes may add versatility to the signaling between these cell types during human hippocampal ontogeny; disruption of such signaling may contribute to CNS dysfunction during pregnancy.


Hypertension | 1999

Increased Acetylcholine-Induced Vasodilation in Pregnant Rats A Role for Gap Junctional Communication

Maria Fernanda Villela Dantas; Marcia Urban; David C. Spray; Maria Helena C. Carvalho; Rita de Cassia Aleixo Tostes Passaglia

We have tested the hypothesis that increased gap junctional communication contributes to the augmented endothelium-dependent vasodilation in pregnancy. Contractile force and connexin43 expression were measured in aortic rings from nonpregnant and pregnant rats. Norepinephrine-constricted aortas from pregnant rats were more sensitive to acetylcholine, but not to sodium nitroprusside, compared with those from nonpregnant rats. Vessels from pregnant rats, constricted either with 45 mmol/L KCl or with norepinephrine + 10(-4) mol/L N(G)-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA), an inhibitor of nitric oxide synthase, also exhibited greater relaxation to acetylcholine. Heptanol, an uncoupler of gap junctional communication, inhibited acetylcholine responses in norepinephrine-constricted aortas from nonpregnant rats but greatly impaired acetylcholine relaxation in aortas from pregnant rats. Heptanol also inhibited in both groups acetylcholine responses in vessels constricted with KCl, only minimally affected acetylcholine relaxation in arteries constricted with norepinephrine + L-NMMA, and did not change sodium nitroprusside-induced relaxation. Tetraethylammonium chloride induced greater contractions in control aortas compared with aortas from pregnant rats. Increased connexin43 mRNA levels were found in the uterus and in the mesenteric, uterine, and thoracic aortic arteries, but not in the heart and brain, from pregnant rats. These results suggest that increased gap junctional communication, possibly due to increased gap junction protein expression, may facilitate the effects of endothelium-derived relaxing factors, contributing to the augmented endothelium-dependent relaxation in arteries from pregnant rats.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 1998

Changes in the Properties of Gap Junctions during Neuronal Differentiation of Hippocampal Progenitor Cells

Renato Rozental; Mildred Morales; Mark F. Mehler; Marcia Urban; Marion Kremer; Rolf Dermietzel; John A. Kessler; David C. Spray


Cell Structure and Function | 1999

TPA induced expression and function of human connexin 26 by post-translational mechanisms in stably transfected neuroblastoma cells.

Takashi Kojima; Miduturu Srinivas; Alfredo G. Fort; Mathew Hopperstad; Marcia Urban; Elliot L. Hertzberg; Yohichi Mochizuki; David C. Spray


Journal of biomolecular techniques | 2002

Hits and Misses from Gene Expression Ratio Measurements in cDNA Microarray Studies

Dumitru A. Iacobas; Aldo Massimi; Marcia Urban; Sanda Iacobas; David C. Spray


Romanian journal of physiology : physiological sciences / [Academia de Stiinte Medicale] | 2002

Transcriptomic characterization of four classes of cell-cell/cell-matrix genes in brains and hearts of wild type and connexin43 null mice.

Dumitru A. Iacobas; Marcia Urban; Sanda Iacobas; David C. Spray


Romanian journal of physiology : physiological sciences / [Academia de Stiinte Medicale] | 2002

CONTROL AND VARIABILITY OF GENE EXPRESSION IN MOUSE BRAIN AND IN A NEUROBLASTOMA CELL LINE

Dumitru A. Iacobas; Marcia Urban; Sanda Iacobas; David C. Spray


Revista medico-chirurgicală̆ a Societă̆ţ̜ii de Medici ş̧i Naturaliş̧ti din Iaş̧i | 2003

Transcription regulation and coordination of some cell signaling genes in brain and heart of connexin 43 null mouse

Dumitru A. Iacobas; Marcia Urban; Sanda Iacobas; David C. Spray


Journal of biomolecular techniques | 2002

Improved Procedures to Mine Data Obtained From Spotted cDNA Arrays

Andrei D. Iacobas; Marcia Urban; Aldo Massimi; David C. Spray

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Renato Rozental

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Dumitru A. Iacobas

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Sanda Iacobas

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Yasuhisa Fujibayashi

National Institute of Radiological Sciences

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