Ju Liu

Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

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Publications (2)12.19 Total impact

  • Article: Ectopic notch activation in developing podocytes causes glomerulosclerosis.
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    ABSTRACT: Genetic evidence supports an early role for Notch signaling in the fate of podocytes during glomerular development. Decreased expression of Notch transcriptional targets in developing podocytes after the determination of cell fate suggests that constitutive Notch signaling may oppose podocyte differentiation. This study determined the effects of constitutive Notch signaling on podocyte differentiation by ectopically expressing Notch's intracellular domain (NOTCH-IC), the biologically active, intracellular product of proteolytic cleavage of the Notch receptor, in developing podocytes of transgenic mice. Histologic and molecular analyses revealed normal glomerular morphology and expression of podocyte markers in newborn NOTCH-IC-expressing mice; however, mice developed severe proteinuria and showed evidence of progressive glomerulosclerosis at 2 wk after birth. Features of mature podocytes were lost: Foot processes were effaced; expression of Wt1, Nphs1, and Nphs2 was downregulated; cell-cycle re-entry was induced; and the expression of Pax2 was increased. In contrast, mice with podocyte-specific inactivation of Rbpsuh, which encodes a protein essential for canonical Notch signaling, seemed normal. In addition, the damaging effects of NOTCH-IC expression were prevented in transgenic mice after simultaneous conditional inactivation of Rbpsuh in murine podocytes. These results suggest that Notch signaling is dispensable during terminal differentiation of podocytes but that constitutive (or inappropriate) Notch signaling is deleterious, leading to glomerulosclerosis.
    Journal of the American Society of Nephrology 07/2008; 19(6):1139-57. · 9.66 Impact Factor
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    Article: Cre-conditional expression of constitutively active Notch1 in transgenic mice.
    Ju Liu, Corrinne G Lobe
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    ABSTRACT: The Notch signaling pathway plays a critical role during mammalian development. To bypass embryonic lethality associated with constitutive Notch1 signaling, we created transgenic mice with a floxed beta-geo/stop signal between a cytomegalo virus promoter and the constitutively active intracellular domain of Notch1 (IC-Notch1). IC-Notch1 is activated upon introduction of Cre recombinase and it is coexpressed with an enhanced green fluorescent protein or human placental alkaline phosphatase reporter. We created three IC-Notch1 transgenic mouse lines and crossed them to a general Cre deletor mouse line, pCX-Cre. The double transgenic IC-Notch1/pCX-Cre embryos have widespread expression of IC-Notch1 and reporters and die before 10.5 days of gestation. Morphological and histological analysis of the double transgenic embryos indicated growth arrest and various developmental defects, including lack of neural tube closure, disorganized somites, and disrupted vasculature. The conditional IC-Notch1 expressing transgenic mice provide a unique tool to investigate the Notch pathway using tissue-specific Cre mice and inducible Cre systems.
    genesis 06/2007; 45(5):259-65. · 2.53 Impact Factor