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Characterization of tissue specific expression of Notch‐1 in human tissues
Author(s) -
Baldi Alfonso,
Falco Maria,
Luca Luca,
Cottone Giuliano,
Paggi Marco G.,
Nickoloff Brian J.,
Miele Lucio,
Luca Antonio
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
biology of the cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.543
H-Index - 85
eISSN - 1768-322X
pISSN - 0248-4900
DOI - 10.1111/j.1768-322x.2004.tb01418.x
Subject(s) - notch signaling pathway , biology , microbiology and biotechnology , hes1 , hes3 signaling axis , germinal center , notch proteins , neurogenesis , notch 1 , cell fate determination , cellular differentiation , immunology , signal transduction , b cell , genetics , gene , transcription factor , antibody
Summry— Signaling through the Notch cell surface receptors is a highly conserved mechanism of cell fate specification. Notch signaling regulates proliferation, differentiation and cell death. In vertebrates, putative gene duplication has originated four Notch genes, Notch‐1, −2, −3 and −4. They have been implicated in neurogenesis, hematopoiesis, T‐cell development, vasculogenesis and brain cortical growth. We have investigated Notch‐1 distribution in normal human tissues by immunohistochemistry and immunoblot. We detected widespread expression of Notch‐1 cytoplasmatic staining, with different tissue distributions in the different organs examined. In particular, high expression of Notch‐1 was detected in the intermediate suprabasal layers, but not in the dead cells at the extreme periphery of stratified epithelia. Moreover, a low/intermediate level of Notch‐1 was observed in lymphocytes in several peripheral lymphoid tissues; in particular the germinal centers of lymph nodes showed the most abundant number of positive cells, which appeared to be centroblasts/immunoblasts based on nuclear morphology. Notch‐1 participates in keratinocytes differentiation. We showed by Western blot analysis that Notch‐1 level was clearly increased in HaCaT cells after Ca ++ addition and remained substantially elevated until late differentiation stages. These results suggest that Notch‐1 may function in numerous cell types in processes beyond cell fate determination, such as neuronal plasticity, muscle hypertrophy, liver regeneration, and germinal center lymphopoiesis during the immune response.