4 resultados para EP4 Subtype

em Universidad Politécnica de Madrid


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The Caribbean and Central America are among the regions with highest HIV-1B prevalence worldwide. Despite of this high virus burden, little is known about the timing and the migration patterns of HIV-1B in these regions. Migration is one of the major processes shaping the genetic structure of virus populations. Thus, reconstruction of epidemiological network may contribute to understand HIV-1B evolution and reduce virus prevalence. We have investigated the spatio-temporal dynamics of the HIV-1B epidemic in The Caribbean and Central America using 1,610 HIV-1B partial pol sequences from 13 Caribbean and 5 Central American countries. Timing of HIV-1B introduction and virus evolutionary rates, as well as the spatial genetic structure of the HIV-1B populations and the virus migration patterns were inferred. Results revealed that in The Caribbean and Central America most of the HIV-1B variability was generated since the 80 s. At odds with previous data suggesting that Haiti was the origin of the epidemic in The Caribbean, our reconstruction indicated that the virus could have been disseminated from Puerto Rico and Antigua. These two countries connected two distinguishable migration areas corresponding to the (mainly Spanish-colonized) Easter and (mainly British-colonized) Western islands, which indicates that virus migration patterns are determined by geographical barriers and by the movement of human populations among culturally related countries. Similar factors shaped the migration of HIV-1B in Central America. The HIV-1B population was significantly structured according to the country of origin, and the genetic diversity in each country was associated with the virus prevalence in both regions, which suggests that virus populations evolve mainly through genetic drift. Thus, our work contributes to the understanding of HIV-1B evolution and dispersion pattern in the Americas, and its relationship with the geography of the area and the movements of human populations.

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KCNQ4 mutations underlie DFNA2, a subtype of autosomal dominant hearing loss. We had previously identified the pore-region p.G296S mutation that impaired channel activity in two manners: it greatly reduced surface expression and abolished channel function. Moreover, G296S mutant exerted a strong dominant-negative effect on potassium currents by reducing the channel expression at the cell surface representing the first study to identify a trafficking-dependent dominant mechanism for the loss of KCNQ4 channel function in DFNA2. Here, we have investigated the pathogenic mechanism associated with all the described KCNQ4 mutations (F182L, W242X, E260K, D262V, L274H, W276S, L281S, G285C, G285S and G321S) that are located in different domains of the channel protein. F182L mutant showed a wild type-like cell-surface distribution in transiently transfected NIH3T3 fibroblasts and the recorded currents in Xenopus oocytes resembled those of the wild-type. The remaining KCNQ4 mutants abolished potassium currents, but displayed distinct levels of defective cell-surface expression in NIH3T3 as quantified by flow citometry. Co-localization studies revealed these mutants were retained in the ER, unless W242X, which showed a clear co-localization with Golgi apparatus. Interestingly, this mutation results in a truncated KCNQ4 protein at the S5 transmembrane domain, before the pore region, that escapes the protein quality control in the ER but does not reach the cell surface at normal levels. Currently we are investigating the trafficking behaviour and electrophysiological properties of several KCNQ4 truncated proteins artificially generated in order to identify specific motifs involved in channel retention/exportation. Altogether, our results indicate that a defect in KCNQ4 trafficking is the common mechanism underlying DFNA2

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Desentrañar el funcionamiento del cerebro es uno de los principales desafíos a los que se enfrenta la ciencia actual. Un área de estudio que ha despertado muchas expectativas e interés es el análisis de la estructura cortical desde el punto de vista morfológico, de manera que se cree una simulación del cerebro a nivel molecular. Con ello se espera poder profundizar en el estudio de numerosas enfermedades neurológicas y patológicas. Con el desarrollo de este proyecto se persigue el estudio del soma y de las espinas desde el punto de vista de la neuromorfología teórica. Es común en el estado del arte que en el análisis de las características morfológicas de una neurona en tres dimensiones el soma sea ignorado o, en el mejor de los casos, que sea sustituido por una simple esfera. De hecho, el concepto de soma resulta abstracto porque no se dispone de una dfinición estricta y robusta que especifique exactamente donde finaliza y comienzan las dendritas. En este proyecto se alcanza por primera vez una definición matemática de soma para determinar qué es el soma. Con el fin de simular somas se ahonda en los atributos utilizados en el estado del arte. Estas propiedades, de índole genérica, no especifican una morfología única. Es por ello que se propone un método que agrupe propiedades locales y globales de la morfología. En disposición de las características se procede con la categorización del cuerpo celular en distintas clases a partir de un nuevo subtipo de red bayesiana dinámica adaptada al espacio. Con ello se discute la existencia de distintas clases de somas y se descubren las diferencias entre los somas piramidales de distintas capas del cerebro. A partir del modelo matemático se simulan por primera vez somas virtuales. Algunas morfologías de espinas han sido atribuidas a ciertos comportamientos cognitivos. Por ello resulta de interés dictaminar las clases existentes y relacionarlas con funciones de la actividad cerebral. La clasificación más extendida (Peters y Kaiserman-Abramof, 1970) presenta una definición ambigua y subjetiva dependiente de la interpretación de cada individuo y por tanto discutible. Este estudio se sustenta en un conjunto de descriptores extraídos mediante una técnica de análisis topológico local para representaciones 3D. Sobre estos datos se trata de alcanzar el conjunto de clases más adecuado en el que agrupar las espinas así como de describir cada grupo mediante reglas unívocas. A partir de los resultados, se discute la existencia de un continuo de espinas y las propiedades que caracterizan a cada subtipo de espina. ---ABSTRACT---Unravel how the brain works is one of the main challenges faced by current science. A field of study which has aroused great expectations and interest is the analysis of the cortical structure from a morphological point of view, so that a molecular level simulation of the brain is achieved. This is expected to deepen the study of many neurological and pathological diseases. This project seeks the study of the soma and spines from the theoretical neuromorphology point of view. In the state of the art it is common that when it comes to analyze the morphological characteristics of a three dimension neuron the soma is ignored or, in the best case, it is replaced by a simple sphere. In fact, the concept of soma is abstract because there is not a robust and strict definition on exactly where it ends and dendrites begin. In this project a mathematical definition is reached for the first time to determine what a soma is. With the aim to simulate somas the atributes applied in the state of the art are studied. These properties, generic in nature, do not specify a unique morphology. It is why it was proposed a method to group local and global morphology properties. In arrangement of the characteristics it was proceed with the categorization of the celular body into diferent classes by using a new subtype of dynamic Bayesian network adapted to space. From the result the existance of different classes of somas and diferences among pyramidal somas from distinct brain layers are discovered. From the mathematical model virtual somas were simulated for the first time. Some morphologies of spines have been attributed to certain cognitive behaviours. For this reason it is interesting to rule the existent classes and to relate them with their functions in the brain activity. The most extended classification (Peters y Kaiserman-Abramof, 1970) presents an ambiguous and subjective definition that relies on the interpretation of each individual and consequently it is arguable. This study was based on the set of descriptors extracted from a local topological analysis technique for 3D representations. On these data it was tried to reach the most suitable set of classes to group the spines as well as to describe each cluster by unambiguous rules. From these results, the existance of a continuum of spines and the properties that characterize each spine subtype were discussed .

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Objectives: A recently introduced pragmatic scheme promises to be a useful catalog of interneuron names.We sought to automatically classify digitally reconstructed interneuronal morphologies according tothis scheme. Simultaneously, we sought to discover possible subtypes of these types that might emergeduring automatic classification (clustering). We also investigated which morphometric properties weremost relevant for this classification.Materials and methods: A set of 118 digitally reconstructed interneuronal morphologies classified into thecommon basket (CB), horse-tail (HT), large basket (LB), and Martinotti (MA) interneuron types by 42 of theworld?s leading neuroscientists, quantified by five simple morphometric properties of the axon and fourof the dendrites. We labeled each neuron with the type most commonly assigned to it by the experts. Wethen removed this class information for each type separately, and applied semi-supervised clustering tothose cells (keeping the others? cluster membership fixed), to assess separation from other types and lookfor the formation of new groups (subtypes). We performed this same experiment unlabeling the cells oftwo types at a time, and of half the cells of a single type at a time. The clustering model is a finite mixtureof Gaussians which we adapted for the estimation of local (per-cluster) feature relevance. We performedthe described experiments on three different subsets of the data, formed according to how many expertsagreed on type membership: at least 18 experts (the full data set), at least 21 (73 neurons), and at least26 (47 neurons).Results: Interneurons with more reliable type labels were classified more accurately. We classified HTcells with 100% accuracy, MA cells with 73% accuracy, and CB and LB cells with 56% and 58% accuracy,respectively. We identified three subtypes of the MA type, one subtype of CB and LB types each, andno subtypes of HT (it was a single, homogeneous type). We got maximum (adapted) Silhouette widthand ARI values of 1, 0.83, 0.79, and 0.42, when unlabeling the HT, CB, LB, and MA types, respectively,confirming the quality of the formed cluster solutions. The subtypes identified when unlabeling a singletype also emerged when unlabeling two types at a time, confirming their validity. Axonal morphometricproperties were more relevant that dendritic ones, with the axonal polar histogram length in the [pi, 2pi) angle interval being particularly useful.Conclusions: The applied semi-supervised clustering method can accurately discriminate among CB, HT, LB, and MA interneuron types while discovering potential subtypes, and is therefore useful for neuronal classification. The discovery of potential subtypes suggests that some of these types are more heteroge-neous that previously thought. Finally, axonal variables seem to be more relevant than dendritic ones fordistinguishing among the CB, HT, LB, and MA interneuron types.