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Dive into the research topics where Peter Lonai is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter Lonai.


Immunity | 1998

Targeted Disruption of the Mouse Caspase 8 Gene Ablates Cell Death Induction by the TNF Receptors, Fas/Apo1, and DR3 and Is Lethal Prenatally

Eugene Varfolomeev; Marcus Schuchmann; Victor Luria; Nuchanard Chiannilkulchai; Jacques S. Beckmann; Igor Mett; Denis Rebrikov; Vadim Brodianski; Oliver Kemper; Orit Kollet; Tsvee Lapidot; Dror Soffer; Tama Sobe; Karen B. Avraham; Tanya Goncharov; Helmut Holtmann; Peter Lonai; David Wallach

Homozygous targeted disruption of the mouse Caspase 8 (Casp8) gene was found to be lethal in utero. The Caspase 8 null embryos exhibited impaired heart muscle development and congested accumulation of erythrocytes. Recovery of hematopoietic colony-forming cells from the embryos was very low. In fibroblast strains derived from these embryos, the TNF receptors, Fas/Apo1, and DR3 were able to activate the Jun N-terminal kinase and to trigger IkappaB alpha phosphorylation and degradation. They failed, however, to induce cell death, while doing so effectively in wild-type fibroblasts. These findings indicate that Caspase 8 plays a necessary and nonredundant role in death induction by several receptors of the TNF/NGF family and serves a vital role in embryonal development.


Matrix Biology | 2003

Expression and biological role of laminin-1

Peter Ekblom; Peter Lonai; Jan F. Talts

Of the approximately 15 laminin trimers described in mammals, laminin-1 expression seems to be largely limited to epithelial basement membranes. It appears early during epithelial morphogenesis in most tissues of the embryo, and remains present as a major epithelial laminin in some adult tissues. Previous organ culture studies with embryonic tissues have suggested that laminin-1 is important for epithelial development. Recent data using genetically manipulated embryonic stem (ES) cells grown as embryoid bodies provide strong support for the view of a specific role of laminin-1 in epithelial morphogenesis. One common consequence of genetic ablation of FGF signaling, beta1-integrin or laminin gamma1 chain expression in ES cells is the absence of laminin-1, which correlates with failure of BM assembly and epiblast differentiation. Partial but distinct rescue of epiblast differentiation has been achieved in all three mutants by exogenously added laminin-1. Laminin-1 contains several biologically active modules, but several are found in beta1 or gamma1 chains shared by at least 11 laminins. However, the carboxytermini of the alpha chains contain five laminin globular (LG) modules, distinct for each alpha chain. There is increasing evidence for a particular role of alpha1LG4 binding to its receptors for epithelial tubulogenesis. The biological roles of this and other domains of laminin-1 are currently being explored by genetic means. The pathways controlling laminin-1 synthesis have remained largely unknown, but recent advances raise the possibility that laminin-1 and collagen IV synthesis can be regulated by pro-survival kinases of the protein kinase B/Akt family.


The EMBO Journal | 1997

Transgenic mouse model for studying the transcriptional activity of the p53 protein: age‐ and tissue‐dependent changes in radiation‐induced activation during embryogenesis

Eyal Gottlieb; Rebecca Haffner; Ayala King; Gad Asher; Peter Gruss; Peter Lonai; Moshe Oren

The p53 tumor suppressor protein is a sequence‐specific transcriptional activator of target genes. Exposure of cells to DNA damage results in accumulation of biochemically active p53, with consequent activation of p53‐responsive promoters. In order to study how the transcriptional activity of the p53 protein is regulated in vivo, a transgenic mouse strain was generated. These mice harbor the p53‐dependent promoter of the mdm2 gene, fused to a lacZ reporter gene. Induction of lacZ activity by DNA damage (ionizing radiation) was monitored in embryos of different p53 genotypes. The transgenic promoter was substantially activated in vivo following irradiation; activation required functional p53. The activation pattern became more restricted with increasing embryo age, as well as with the state of differentiation of a given tissue. Generally, maximal p53 activation occurred in rapidly proliferating, relatively less differentiated cells. A striking extent of haploinsufficiency was revealed—induction of promoter activity was far less efficient in mice carrying only one wild‐type p53 allele. This suggests that normal levels of cellular p53 are limiting, and any further reduction already compromises the p53 response significantly. Thus, the activation potential of p53 is tightly controlled in vivo, both spatially and temporally, and an important element in this control is the presence of limiting basal levels of activatable p53.


Oncogene | 2000

Fibroblast growth factor (FGF) signaling through PI 3-kinase and Akt/PKB is required for embryoid body differentiation.

Yali Chen; Xiaofeng Li; Veraragavan P. Eswarakumar; Rony Seger; Peter Lonai

The role of FGF signaling in early epithelial differentiation was investigated in ES (embryonic stem) cell derived embryoid bodies. A dominant negative fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) mutation was created by stably introducing into ES cells an Fgfr2 cDNA, truncated in its enzymatic domains. These cells failed to differentiate into cystic embryoid bodies. No epithelial differentiation and cavitation morphogenesis could be observed, in the mutant, although its rate of cell proliferation remained unchanged. This phenotype was associated with a significant decrease in the activation of Akt/PKB and PLCγ-1, as compared to the wild type, while the activation of MAPK/Erk was less affected. Requirement for PI 3-kinase signaling in embryoid body differentiation was demonstrated by specific inhibitors. Akt/PKB activation was abrogated by wortmannin in short-term experiments. In long-term cultures Ly294002 inhibited the differentiation of ES cells into embryoid bodies. Our data demonstrate that for early epithelial differentiation FGF signaling is required through the PI 3-kinase-Akt/PKB pathway.


Oncogene | 1997

Differential expression of NDF/neuregulin receptors ErbB-3 and ErbB-4 and involvement in inhibition of neuronal differentiation

Ronit Pinkas-Kramarski; Raya Eilam; Iris Alroy; Gil Levkowitz; Peter Lonai; Yosef Yarden

Two receptor tyrosine kinases, ErB-3 and ErbB-4, mediate signaling by Neu differentiation factors (NDFs, also called neuregulins), while ErbB-1 and ErbB-2 serve as co-receptors. We show that the two NDF/neuregulin receptors differ in spatial and temporal expression patterns: The kinase-defective receptor, ErbB-3, is expressed primarily in epithelial layers of various organs, in the peripheral nervous system, and in adult brain, whereas ErbB-4 is restricted to the developing central nervous system and to the embryonic heart. An example of alternating expression of the two receptors is provided by the developing cerebellum: During postnatal cerebellar development, ErbB-4 expression slightly decreases along with a decline in NDF transcription, whereas ErbB-3 expression commences after the peak of neurogenesis. To study functional differences, we established primary brain cultures and found that ErbB-3 was expressed only in oligodendrocytes, whereas ErbB-4 expression was shared by oligodendrocytes, astrocytes and neurons. Blocking the action of endogenous NDF in vitro, by using a soluble form of ErbB-4, accelerated neurite outgrowth in both primary cultures and in neuronal-type cultures of the P19 teratocarcinoma, suggesting an inhibitory effect of NDF on neural differentiation. Apparently, ErbB-3 is associated with proliferation of P19 cells, whereas ErbB-4 correlates with a differentiated phenotype. We conclude that the two NDF receptors play distinct, rather than redundant, developmental and physiological roles.


Development | 2004

Distinct GATA6- and laminin-dependent mechanisms regulate endodermal and ectodermal embryonic stem cell fates

Li Li; Esther Arman; Peter Ekblom; David Edgar; Patricia Murray; Peter Lonai

This study investigates the establishment of alternative cell fates during embryoid body differentiation when ES cells diverge into two epithelia simulating the pre-gastrulation endoderm and ectoderm. We report that endoderm differentiation and endoderm-specific gene expression, such as expression of laminin 1 subunits, is controlled by GATA6 induced by FGF. Subsequently, differentiation of the non-polar primitive ectoderm into columnar epithelium of the epiblast is induced by laminin 1. Using GATA6 transformed Lamc1-null endoderm-like cells, we demonstrate that laminin 1 exhibited by the basement membrane induces epiblast differentiation and cavitation by cell-to-matrix/matrix-to-cell interactions that are similar to the in vivo crosstalk in the early embryo. Pharmacological and dominant-negative inhibitors reveal that the cell shape change of epiblast differentiation requires ROCK, the Rho kinase. We also show that pluripotent ES cells display laminin receptors; hence, these stem cells may serve as target for columnar ectoderm differentiation. Laminin is not bound by endoderm derivatives; therefore, the sub-endodermal basement membrane is anchored selectively to the ectoderm, conveying polarity to its assembly and to the differentiation induced by it. Unique to these interactions is their flow through two cell layers connected by laminin 1 and their involvement in the differentiation of two epithelia from the same stem cell pool: one into endoderm controlled by FGF and GATA6; and the other into epiblast regulated by laminin 1 and Rho kinase.


Mechanisms of Development | 1999

Expression of Fgfr2 in the early mouse embryo indicates its involvement in preimplantation development

Rebecca Haffner-Krausz; Marat Gorivodsky; Yali Chen; Peter Lonai

We report that the IIIc transcriptional alternative of Fgfr2 is transcribed in the unfertilized egg and that during early zygotic transcription, messages encoded by both Fgfr2 alternatives (IIIc and IIIb) are present. The Fgfr2 protein was first detected in peripheral blastomeres of compacted morulae. Trophectoderm specificity of Fgfr2 became obvious in the early blastocyst and with maturation its localization underwent further specification, Fgfr2 concentration increased at the abembryonic pole and decreased at the embryonic pole. Moreover Fgfr2 expression became markedly asymmetrical along the animal-vegetal axis of the mature blastocyst. Our observations indicate a role for Fgfr2 in trophectoderm growth and specification and in the orientation and polarity of the preimplantation conceptus.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Akt/PKB regulates laminin and collagen IV isotypes of the basement membrane

Xiaofeng Li; Ulrika Talts; Jan F. Talts; Esther Arman; Peter Ekblom; Peter Lonai

Basement membranes are important for epithelial differentiation, cell survival, and normal and metastatic cell migration. Much is known about their breakdown and remodeling, yet their positive regulation is poorly understood. Our previous analysis of a fibroblast growth factor (FGF) receptor mutation raised the possibility that protein kinase B (Akt/PKB) activated by FGF is connected to the expression of certain laminin and type IV collagen isotypes. Here we test this hypothesis and demonstrate that constitutively active Akt/PKB, an important downstream element of phosphoinositide 3′-kinase signaling, induces the synthesis of laminin-1 and collagen IV isotypes and causes their translocation to the basement membrane. By using promoter–reporter constructs, we show that constitutively active phosphoinositide 3′-kinase-p110 or Akt/PKB activates, whereas dominant negative Akt/PKB inhibits, transcription of laminin β1 and collagen IV α1 in differentiating C2 myoblast- and insulin-induced Chinese hamster ovary–T cell cultures. These results suggest that Akt/PKB activated by receptor tyrosine kinases is involved in the positive regulation of basement membrane formation. The possible role of Akt/PKB-induced laminin and collagen IV synthesis in cell survival and differentiation will be discussed.


FEBS Letters | 1998

Complex regulation of multiple cytohesin‐like genes in murine tissues and cells

Heui-Soo Kim; Yali Chen; Peter Lonai

Three cytohesin‐like cDNA molecules were isolated from murine ES cell derived embryoid bodies. The genomic structure of one of the three, CLM2, has been determined and transcriptional variants of each were isolated from a mouse brain cDNA library. The relative expression patterns of CLM1, 2, 3 and their transcriptional alternatives were determined by RT‐PCR, nucleotide sequencing and RNA blotting. Their broad distribution and cell and tissue specific expression patterns suggest complex regulation during development and in the adult.


Anatomy and Embryology | 2004

Regulation of external genitalia development by concerted actions of FGF ligands and FGF receptors

Yoshihiko Satoh; Ryuma Haraguchi; Tracy J. Wright; Suzanne L. Mansour; Juha Partanen; Mohammad K. Hajihosseini; Veraragavan P. Eswarakumar; Peter Lonai; Gen Yamada

Members of the fibroblast growth factor (FGF) family play diverse roles during the development and patterning of various organs. In human and mice, 22 FGFs and four receptors derived from several splice variants are present. Redundant expression and function of FGF genes in organogenesis have been reported, but their roles in embryonic external genitalia, genital tubercle (GT), development have not been studied in detail. To address the role of FGF during external genitalia development, we have analyzed the expression of FGF genes (Fgf8, 9, 10) and receptor genes (Fgfr1, r2IIIb, r2IIIc) in GT of mice. Furthermore, Fgf10 and Fgfr2IIIb mutant mice were analyzed to elucidate their roles in embryonic external genitalia development. Fgfr2IIIb was expressed in urethral plate epithelium during GT development. Fgfr2IIIb mutant mice display urethral dysmorphogenesis. Marker gene analysis for urethral plate and bilateral mesenchymal formation suggests the existence of epithelial-mesenchymal interaction during urethral morphogenesis. Therefore, FGF10/FGFR2IIIb signals seem to constitute a developmental cascade for such morphogenesis.

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David Givol

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Joseph Puri

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Esther Arman

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Avi Orr-Urtreger

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Nechama Haran-Ghera

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Yinon Ben-Neriah

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Marat Gorivodsky

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Yali Chen

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Yosef Yarden

Weizmann Institute of Science

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