Urs T. Ruegg
University of Geneva
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Featured researches published by Urs T. Ruegg.
Developmental Cell | 2003
Martin Schwander; Marco Leu; Michael Stumm; Olivier M. Dorchies; Urs T. Ruegg; Johannes C. Schittny; Ulrich Müller
The mechanisms that regulate the formation of multinucleated muscle fibers from mononucleated myoblasts are not well understood. We show here that extracellular matrix (ECM) receptors of the beta1 integrin family regulate myoblast fusion. beta1-deficient myoblasts adhere to each other, but plasma membrane breakdown is defective. The integrin-associated tetraspanin CD9 that regulates cell fusion is no longer expressed at the cell surface of beta1-deficient myoblasts, suggesting that beta1 integrins regulate the formation of a protein complex important for fusion. Subsequent to fusion, beta1 integrins are required for the assembly of sarcomeres. Other ECM receptors such as the dystrophin glycoprotein complex are still expressed but cannot compensate for the loss of beta1 integrins, providing evidence that different ECM receptors have nonredundant functions in skeletal muscle fibers.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000
Martha Ogilvie; Xiaobing Yu; Valérie Nicolas-Métral; Silvia Pulido; Chun Liu; Urs T. Ruegg; Constance Tom Noguchi
Erythropoietin (Epo) is required for the production of mature red blood cells. The requirement for Epo and its receptor (EpoR) for normal heart development and the response of vascular endothelium and cells of neural origin to Epo provide evidence that the function of Epo as a growth factor or cytokine to protect cells from apoptosis extends beyond the hematopoietic lineage. We now report that the EpoR is expressed on myoblasts and can mediate a biological response of these cells to treatment with Epo. Primary murine satellite cells and myoblast C2C12 cells, both of which express endogenous EpoR, exhibit a proliferative response to Epo and a marked decrease in terminal differentiation to form myotubes. We also observed that Epo stimulation activates Jak2/Stat5 signal transduction and increases cytoplasmic calcium, which is dependent on tyrosine phosphorylation. In erythroid progenitor cells, Epo stimulates induction of transcription factor GATA-1 and EpoR; in C2C12 cells, GATA-3 and EpoR expression are induced. The decrease in differentiation of C2C12 cells is concomitant with an increase in Myf-5 and MyoD expression and inhibition of myogenin induction during differentiation, altering the pattern of expression of the MyoD family of transcription factors during muscle differentiation. These data suggest that, rather than acting in an instructive or specific mode for differentiation, Epo can stimulate proliferation of myoblasts to expand the progenitor population during differentiation and may have a potential role in muscle development or repair.
Journal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology | 1985
Robert P. Hof; Urs T. Ruegg; Akiko Hof; Vogel A
The stereoisomers of the new dihydropyri-dine derivative 202–791 [isopropyl 4-(2,1,3-benzoxadi-azol-4-yl)-1,4-dihydro-2,6-dimethyl-5-nitro-3-pyridinecar-boxylate] were synthesized separately and tested on isolated rabbit aortic rings for effects on depolarization-induced contraction and depolarization-stimulated uptake of 45Ca2+. The racemic mixture enhanced contraction of rabbit aortic rings at low levels of depolarization but inhibited contraction and 45Ca2+ uptake at high levels of depolarization. The IC50 values were 2.0 × 10−7 and 1.7 × 107 M, respectively. The R enantiomer inhibited contraction and 45Ca2+ uptake with IC50 values of 3.2 × 10−8 and 4.3 × 10−8 M, respectively. This compound showed no stimulant activity. By contrast, the S enantiomer of 202–791 shifted the concentration-response curve for depolarization-induced contraction in an almost parallel fashion to the left, thus enhancing contraction. The EC50 value for this effect at a KCl concentration of 16 mM was 1.8 × 10−7 M. This compound enhanced 45Ca2+ uptake concentration dependently at all levels of depolarization tested. Thus, the stereoisomers of a dihydropyridine derivative may behave as a calcium entry blocker or a calcium entry enhancer on vascular smooth muscle, depending only on the stereochemistry. If asymmetric compounds elicit effects suggesting a dualistic action at the calcium channel, then the stereoisomers should be prepared.
Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2003
Annamaria De Luca; Sabata Pierno; Antonella Liantonio; Michela Cetrone; Claudia Camerino; Bodvael Fraysse; Massimo Mirabella; Serenella Servidei; Urs T. Ruegg; Diana Conte Camerino
A preclinical screening for prompt-to-use drugs that are safer than steroids and beneficial in Duchenne muscular dystrophy was performed. Compounds able to reduce calcium-induced degeneration (taurine or creatine 10% in chow) or to stimulate regeneration [insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1); 50 or 500 μg/kg s.c.] were administered for 4 to 8 weeks to mdx mice undergoing chronic exercise on a treadmill, a protocol to worsen dystrophy progression. α-Methyl-prednisolone (PDN; 1 mg/kg) was used as positive control. The effects were evaluated in vivo on forelimb strength and in vitro electrophysiologically on the macroscopic chloride conductance (gCl), an index of degeneration-regeneration events in mdx muscles, and on the mechanical threshold, a calcium-sensitive index of excitation-contraction coupling. The exercise produced a significant weakness and an impairment of gCl, by further decreasing the already low value of degenerating diaphragm (DIA) and fully hampering the increase of gCl typical of regenerating extensor digitorum longus (EDL) mdx muscle. The already negative voltage threshold for contraction of mdx EDL was also slightly worsened. Taurine > creatine > IGF-1 counteracted the exercise-induced weakness. The amelioration of gCl was drug- and muscle-specific: taurine was effective in EDL, but not in DIA muscle; IGF-1 and PDN were fully restorative in both muscles, whereas creatine was ineffective. An acute effect of IGF-1 on gCl was observed in vitro in untreated, but not in IGF-1-treated exercised mdx muscles. Taurine > PDN > IGF-1, but not creatine, significantly ameliorated the negative threshold voltage values of the EDL fibers. The results predict a potential benefit of taurine and IGF-1 for treating human dystrophy.
Endocrinology | 2001
Raylene Reimer; Christian Darimont; Sandrine Gremlich; Valérie Nicolas-Métral; Urs T. Ruegg; Katherine Macé
GLP-1 (glucagon-like peptide-1) is a potent insulin secretagogue released from L cells in the intestine. The regulation of GLP-1 secretion has been described both in vivo and in vitro in several animal species, but data from human cellular models are lacking. For this purpose, factors and cell-signaling pathways regulating GLP-1 secretion were investigated in the NCI-H716 human intestinal cell line. After differentiation, these cells homogeneously produced 16.8 pmol GLP-1/mg protein with a basal release of 4.2% during a 2-h incubation period. Nutrients, such as palmitic acid, oleic acid, and meat hydrolysate, stimulated GLP-1 secretion in a dose-dependent manner, as did the cholinergic agonist carbachol and the neuromediator gastrin-releasing peptide. Along with stimulating GLP-1 release, gastrin-releasing peptide, like ionomycin, increased intracellular calcium levels. Activators of PKA and PKC were able to increase GLP-1 secretion in NCI-H716 cells. However, neither PKA activators nor meat hydrolysate i...
Nature Medicine | 2013
Naoki Ito; Urs T. Ruegg; Akira Kudo; Yuko Miyagoe-Suzuki; Shin'ichi Takeda
Skeletal muscle atrophy occurs in aging and pathological conditions, including cancer, diabetes and AIDS. Treatment of atrophy is based on either preventing protein-degradation pathways, which are activated during atrophy, or activating protein-synthesis pathways, which induce muscle hypertrophy. Here we show that neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) regulates load-induced hypertrophy by activating transient receptor potential cation channel, subfamily V, member 1 (TRPV1). The overload-induced hypertrophy was prevented in nNOS-null mice. nNOS was transiently activated within 3 min after overload. This activation promoted formation of peroxynitrite, a reaction product of nitric oxide with superoxide, which was derived from NADPH oxidase 4 (Nox4). Nitric oxide and peroxynitrite then activated Trpv1, resulting in an increase of intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) that subsequently triggered activation of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR). Notably, administration of the TRPV1 agonist capsaicin induced hypertrophy without overload and alleviated unloading- or denervation-induced atrophy. These findings identify nitric oxide, peroxynitrite and [Ca2+]i as the crucial mediators that convert a mechanical load into an intracellular signaling pathway and lead us to suggest that TRPV1 could be a new therapeutic target for treating muscle atrophy.
Journal of Bioenergetics and Biomembranes | 2004
M. Hansson; Gustav Mattiasson; Roland Månsson; Jenny Karlsson; Marcus F. Keep; Peter C. Waldmeier; Urs T. Ruegg; Jean-Maurice Dumont; Kamel Besseghir; Eskil Elmér
Cyclosporin A (CsA) is highly neuroprotective in several animal models of acute neurological damage and neurodegenerative disease with inhibition of the mitochondrial permeability transition (mPT) having emerged as a possible mechanism for the observed neuroprotection. In the present study, we have evaluated two new nonimmunosuppressive cyclosporin analogs NIM811 (Novartis) and UNIL025 (Debiopharm) for their ability to inhibit mPT in rat brain-derived mitochondria. Both NIM811 and UNIL025 were found to be powerful inhibitors of calcium-induced mitochondrial swelling under energized and deenergized conditions, and the maximal effects were identical to those of native CsA. The potencies of mPT inhibition by NIM811 and UNIL025 were stronger, with almost one order of magnitude higher potency for UNIL025 compared to CsA, correlating to their respective inhibitory action of cyclophilin activity. These compounds will be instrumental in the evaluation of mPT as a central target for neuroprotection in vivo.
FEBS Letters | 1998
S.M Pulido; Anne-Catherine Passaquin; W.J Leijendekker; Corinne Challet; Theo Wallimann; Urs T. Ruegg
Dystrophic skeletal muscle cells from Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) patients and mdx mice exhibit elevated cytosolic Ca2+ concentrations ([Ca2+]c). Pretreatment of mdx myotubes for 6–12 days with creatine (20 mM) decreased the elevation in [Ca2+]c induced by either high extracellular Ca2+ concentrations or hypo‐osmotic stress to control levels. 45Ca2+ influx measurements suggest that creatine lowered [Ca2+]c by stimulating sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+‐ATPase. Creatine pretreatment increased levels of phosphocreatine but not ATP. Furthermore, myotube formation and survival were significantly enhanced by creatine pretreatment. Therefore, creatine supplementation may be useful for treatment of DMD.
Neuromuscular Disorders | 2002
Anne-Catherine Passaquin; Mathilde Renard; Laurence Kay; Corinne Challet; Armand Mokhtarian; Theo Wallimann; Urs T. Ruegg
The mdx mouse serves as animal model for Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Energy status in muscles of mdx mice is impaired and we have demonstrated recently that the energy precursor creatine exerts beneficial effects on mdx skeletal muscle cells in culture. Here we show that feeding a creatine-enriched diet to new-born mdx mice strongly reduced the first wave of muscle necrosis four weeks after birth. Necrosis of the fast-twitch muscle extensor digitorum longus was inhibited by 63+/-14% (P<0.0001) while necrosis of the slow-twitch soleus muscle was not significantly decreased. In addition, using chemically skinned muscle fibres, we found that mitochondrial respiration capacity was decreased by about 25% in mdx-derived fibres and that long-term creatine-feeding restored respiration to wild-type levels. These results provide evidence that creatine supplementation in mdx mice improves muscle health and may provide a scientific basis for its use as adjuvant therapy in Duchenne muscular dystrophy.
Journal of Cell Science | 2006
François-Xavier Boittin; Olivier Petermann; Carole Hirn; Peggy Mittaud; O.M. Dorchies; Emmanuelle Roulet; Urs T. Ruegg
Duchenne muscular dystrophy is caused by deficiency of dystrophin and leads to progressive weakness. It has been proposed that the muscle degeneration occurring in this disease is caused by increased Ca2+ influx due to enhanced activity of cationic channels that are activated either by stretch of the plasma membrane (stretch-activated channels) or by Ca2+-store depletion (store-operated channels). Using both cytosolic Ca2+ measurements with Fura-2 and the manganese quench method, we show here that store-operated Ca2+ entry is greatly enhanced in dystrophic skeletal flexor digitorum brevis fibers isolated from mdx5cv mice, a mouse model of Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Moreover, we show for the first time that store-operated Ca2+ entry in these fibers is under the control of the Ca2+-independent phospholipase A2 and that the exaggerated Ca2+ influx can be completely attenuated by inhibitors of this enzyme. Enhanced store-operated Ca2+ entry in dystrophic fibers is likely to be due to a near twofold overexpression of Ca2+-independent phospholipase A2. The Ca2+-independent phospholipase A2 pathway therefore appears as an attractive target to reduce excessive Ca2+ influx and subsequent degeneration occurring in dystrophic fibers.