4 resultados para HOST RESPONSE

em Glasgow Theses Service


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Colorectal cancer is the second most common cause of cancer death in the UK. It is accepted that both tumour and host factors are important determinants of disease progression and survival. While systemic and local inflammatory responses are increasingly recognized to be of particular importance the understanding of the mechanisms linking these important inflammatory processes remains unclear. This thesis examines the prognostic importance of measures of systemic and local inflammation and proposes a hypothesis for a link between tumour necrosis, systemic and local inflammatory responses in patients with colorectal cancer. Chapter 3 reports the comparison of the prognostic value of longitudinal measurements of systemic inflammation in patients undergoing curative resection of colorectal cancer. In Chapter 3 the results demonstrate that there was no significant overall change in either mGPS or NLR from pre- to post- operatively. This study highlighted the associations between pre- and post- operative mGPS and NLR and T-stage (p<0.001), TNM stage (p<0.005) and cancer-specific survival. The relationships between pre-operative measurements were examined using multivariate analysis. For pre-operative measurement both mGPS and NLR were associated with cancer-specific survival while when post-operative measures were examined only mGPS was specifically associated with cancer-specific survival (HR 4.81, CI 2.13-10.83, P<0.001). Chapter 4 examines the prognostic value of the Klintrup-Makinen scoring method and the existing limitations with regard to its clinical utility. An automated scoring method using commercially available image analysis software was developed and compared with manual scoring of tumour inflammatory infiltrates. This study demonstrated that both manual K-M scoring (p<0.001) and automated K-M scoring (p<0.05) had prognostic value in patients who had undergone potentially curative resection of colorectal cancer, and that the novel automated method may provide an objective method of assessment of tumour inflammatory infiltrates using routinely stained haematoxylin and eosin sections of tumour samples. In chapter 5 a hypothesis was proposed that Interleukin-6 may link tumour necrosis and systemic and local inflammatory responses in patients with colorectal cancer. This chapter examined the basis for this hypothesis, which is presented in figure 5.1. In addition, in chapter 5 the importance of this potential link is examined. In chapter 6, the hypothesis outlined in chapter 5 was examined in a cohort of patients who had undergone attempted curative resection of colorectal cancer. This study examined the inter-relationships between circulating mediators, in particular IL-6, tumour necrosis and systemic and local inflammatory responses. This results of this study demonstrated that IL-6 was associated with tumour necrosis (<0.001) and mGPS (<0.001) independent of T-stage. Thus adding weight to the hypothesis that elevated circulating concentrations of IL-6 may play a role in modulating both the systemic and local inflammatory responses in patients with cancer. Chapter 7 further develops the hypothesis that IL-6 signalling may be important in modulating systemic and local inflammatory responses in patients with colorectal cancer. Further, in chapter 7 the basis for the role of trans-signalling in this signaling pathway was examined. In this study, we reported that neither expression of the soluble IL-6 receptor or soluble gp130 were associated with systemic or local inflammatory responses. As a result the possible reasons for these findings were explored and future work suggested. A prospective database of patients undergoing attempted curative resection of colorectal cancer in Glasgow Royal Infirmary was used throughout this thesis. This database was created and is maintained regularly by successive research fellows at the Royal Infirmary. The work presented in this thesis highlights the importance of the host response in the form of systemic and local inflammation in patients with colorectal cancer and proposes a link between these responses and tumour necrosis. In addition, this work adds weight to the body of evidence suggesting that assessment of these host responses may improve stratification to treatment for patients with colorectal cancer. Further, this work proposes a mechanistic link, between tumour necrosis, systemic and local inflammatory responses through Interleukin-6, that merits further investigation.

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Advances in healthcare over the last 100 years has resulted in an ever increasing elderly population. This presents greater challenges for adequate systemic and oral healthcare delivery. With increasing age there is a natural decline in oral health, leading to the loss of teeth and ultimately for some having to wear denture prosthesis. It is currently estimated that approximately one fifth of the UK and US populations have some form of removable prosthesis. The microbiology of denture induced mucosal inflammation is a pivotal factor to consider in denture care management, similar to many other oral diseases of microbial influence, such as caries, gingivitis and periodontitis. Dentures support the growth of microbial biofilms, structures commonly known as denture plaque. Microbiologically, denture stomatitis (DS) is a disease primarily considered to be of yeast aetiology, with the literature disproportionately focussed on Candida spp. However, the denture surface is capable of carrying up to 1011 microbes per milligram, the majority of which are bacteria. Thus it is apparent that denture plaque is more diverse than we assume. There is a fundamental gap in our understanding of the bacterial composition of denture plaque and the role that they may play in denture related disease such as DS. This is categorised as inflammation of the oral mucosa, a disease affecting around half of all denture wearers. It has been proposed that bacteria and fungi interact on the denture surface and that these polymicrobial interactions lead to synergism and increased DS pathogenesis. Therefore, understanding the denture microbiome composition is the key step to beginning to understand disease pathogenesis, and ultimately help improve treatments and identify novel targets for therapeutic and preventative strategies. A group of 131 patients were included within this study in which they provided samples from their dentures, palatal mucosa, saliva and dental plaque. Microbes residing on the denture surface were quantified using standard Miles and Misra culture technique which investigated the presence of Candida, aerobes and anaerobes. These clinical samples also underwent next generation sequencing using the Miseq Illumina platform to give a more global representation of the microbes present at each of these sites in the oral cavity of these denture wearers. This data was then used to compare the composition and diversity of denture, mucosal and dental plaque between one another, as well as between healthy and diseased individuals. Additional comparisons included denture type and the presence or absence of natural teeth. Furthermore, microbiome data was used to assess differences between patients with varying levels of oral hygiene. The host response to the denture microbiome was investigated by screening the patients saliva for the presence and quantification of a range of antimicrobial peptides that are associated with the oral cavity. Based on the microbiome data an in vitro biofilm model was developed that reflected the composition of denture plaque. These biofilms were then used to assess quantitative and compositional changes over time and in response to denture cleansing treatments. Finally, the systemic implications of denture plaque were assessed by screening denture plaque samples for the presence of nine well known respiratory pathogens using quantitative PCR. The results from this study have shown that the bacterial microbiome composition of denture wearers is not consistent throughout the mouth and varies depending on sample site. Moreover, the presence of natural dentition has a significant impact on the microbiome composition. As for healthy and diseased patients the data suggests that compositional changes responsible for disease progression are occurring at the mucosa, and that dentures may in fact be a reservoir for these microbes. In terms of denture hygiene practices, sleeping with a denture in situ was found to be a common occurrence. Furthermore, significant shifts in denture microbiome composition were found in these individuals when compared to the denture microbiome of those that removed their denture at night. As for the host response, some antimicrobial peptides were found to be significantly reduced in the absence of natural dentition, indicating that the oral immune response is gradually impaired with the loss of teeth. This study also identified potentially serious systemic implications in terms of respiratory infection, as 64.6% of patients carried respiratory pathogens on their denture. In conclusion, this is the first study to provide a detailed understanding of the oral microbiome of denture wearers, and has provided evidence that DS development is more complex than simply a candidal infection. Both fungal and bacterial kingdoms clearly play a role in defining the progression of DS. The biofilm model created in this study demonstrated its potential as a platform to test novel actives. Future use of this model will aid in greater understanding of host: biofilm interactions. Such findings are applicable to oral health and beyond, and may help to identify novel therapeutic targets for the treatment of DS and other biofilm associated diseases.

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Inbred strains of C5731 and NIH nice infected with the A/S strain of Plasmodium chaubaudi usually developed high parasitaemias but infections were rarely fatal in immunocompetent mice and in most mice the parasites could be eradicated within 53 days or less. The immune response of C57B1 and NTH mice to infection with the A/S strain of P. chabaudi was studied. The principle method used in this study for investigating the immune response of the mice was to examine the immunity conferred on syngeneic mice, either X-irradiated or non-irradiated, by transferring to them lymphoid cells or serum from immune or semi-immune donors. The lymphoid cell populations examined were unfractionated spleen cells, nylon wool column enriched subpopulations of thymus-derived lymphocytes (T cells) and the so-called bursa-derived lymphocytes (B cells), bone marrow cells and phagocytic cells. In the course of these experiments observations were made on the effect of X-irradiation on the subsequent growth and multiplication of the parasite. In addition, an in vitro assay for antibody-dependent cell mediated cytotoxicity was used to investigate the activity of splenic K cells during malaria infection. K cells are lymphoid cells which may include lymphocytes of an undefined category, but possess receptors for the Fc portion of antibody on their surface and have the ability to non-specifically lyse target cells coated in antibodies. a) The adoptive transfer of immunity to P.chabaudi with immune spleen cells. Spleen cells from mice which had previously been infected with P.chabaudi were able to confer some immunity on syngeneic mice which had been irradiated with 600 or 800 rads. The protection was detected as a shortened patent parasitaemia in immune cell recipients compared to controls. The early experiments indicated the value of using irradiated recipients rather than non-irradiated recipients. In irradiated mice, a) smaller numbers of immune cells were required to promote detectable immunity than in non-irradiated mice, b) there was an amplification of the difference in the duration of primary parasitaemias in recipients of immune cells and normal cells compared to non-irradiated mice and c) as the irradiated host is immunodepressed, the protective effect of donor cells can be examined with a reduced contribution by the hosts own immune system. An initial non-specific resistance to P.chabaudi infection was observed in irradiated mice, although the infection in most of these mice was subsequently more severe than in non-irradiated mice. The non-specific resistance could be reduced or abolished by injecting lymphoid cells into mice shortly after irradiation or by infecting irradiated mice more than 15 days after irradiation. Other workers suggest that following irradiation, the reticulo-endothelial system is stimulated at the time that the non-specific resistance to P.chabaudi was observed. b) the adoptive transfer of immunity in syngeneic mice with enriched subpopulations of splenic immune T cells, B. cells, bone marrow cells and phagocytes. Immunity to P.chabaudi could be adoptively transferred with enriched spleen subpopulations of immune T cells or immune B cells in mice which had been irradiated 600 or 300 rads. The protective effects of unfractionated immune cells was, however, usually better than that of either immune T or F cell subpopulations. In most experiments enriched immune T cell recipients were more likely to suffer relapsing patent parasitaemias than either enriched immune B cell recipients or unfractionated immune cell recipients. In one experiment a comparison was made of the course of P.chabaudi infection in mice which had been irradiated with either 600 rads or 300 rads and which received injections of different immune cells. A dose of 600 rads permits the immune system of mice to recover from the effects of irradiation, but a dose of 800 rads is lethal to mice unless lymphoid cells are injected after irradiation. It was found that in recipients of enriched immune T or B cells, which had been irradiated with 600 rads, the parasitaemia became subpatent before their equivalents irradiated with 800 rads, but that there was little difference in parasitaemias between recipients of unfractionated immune cells given 600 or 800 rads. Experiments in which enriched immune T cells and B cells were recombined and injected into syngeneic mice gave inconclusive results as to whether the immune subpopulations acted synergistically. Similar experiments in which immune subpopulations of lymphoid cells were recombined with normal subpopulations of lymphoid cells demonstrated that the latter cells did not enhance the protective effect of the former cells. Bone marrow cells from immune mice were able to confer some protection on syngeneic recipients, but were not as protective as enriched immune T cells or B cells. The results obtained in adoptive transfer experiments using phagocytic cells from the spleen of immune mice depended on the length of time spleen cells were incubated in petri-dishes at 37° C before harvesting the phagocytes. Using C57B1 mice, phagocytes harvested after 15 hours incubation were as protective as unfractionated immune cells in a cell transfer experiment, but phagocytes harvested after 16 hours incubation were not protective. Examination of NIH phagocytic cells after 2.5 hours incubation at 37°C, which were as protective as unfractionated immune spleen cells in a cell transfer experiment, demonstrated that the petri-dish adherent cells may have contained B lymphocytes. c) The passive transfer of immunity with serum from P.chabaudi infected mice. The passive transfer of serum from C57B1 mice which had been previously infected with P.chabaudi to normal or irradiated syngeneic mice demonstrated that the serum recipients were initially protected from infection. Irradiated mice, however, were delayed longer in the onset of parasitaemia compared to non-irradiated mice. Using NIH mice, sera were collected from unfractionated immune spleen cell recipients, enriched immune T cell recipients and normal spleen recipients on the 11th day of a P.chabaudi infection, just after peak parasitaemia, and also on the 14th day of infection. On day 14, all immune cells recipients and most of the enriched immune T cell recipients had become subpatent but all normal cell recipients still had patent infections. Sera collected from the different spleen cell recipients on the 11th day of infection and passively transferred to irradiated mice demonstrated little protection. Sera collected on the 14th day of infect ion, however, reflected the immune status of the donors in their protective properties in mice infected with P.chabaudi. The serum from unfractionated immune cell recipients was the most protective of the 3 sera when compared to normal NIH serum and the serum from enriched immune T cell recipients was slightly protective, but the serum from normal cell recipients produced an enhanced infection in mice infected with P.chabaudi. d) Antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity of spleen cells in P.chabaudi infected mice. In a preliminary investigation of K cell activity in the spleens of P.chabaudi infected mice, it was found that there was an increased activity of K cells collected at around peak parasitaemia compared to the activity of K cells in non-infected mice, and that this increased activity could also be found in mice which had recently become subpatent. As the target cell for antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity employed was the thick red blood cell, it is not known whether the K cell is involved in the killing of P.chabaudi parasites. These results suggest that both T cells and B cells and antibody may be important in the immune response to P.chabaudi in mice. Primed T cells may act as helper cells in the production of malarial antibodies, but, as enriched primed T cells could confer protection on immunodepressed mice, it is possible that a cell-mediated mechanism of immunity may also exist.

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Monoclonal antibodies are a class of therapeutic that is an expanding area of the lucrative biopharmaceutical industry. These complex proteins are predominantly produced from large cultures of mammalian cells; the industry standard cell line being Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) cells. A number of optimisation strategies have led to antibody titres from CHO cells increasing by a hundred-fold, and it has been proposed that a further bottleneck in biosynthesis is in protein folding and assembly within the secretory pathway. To alleviate this bottleneck, a CHO-derived host cell line was generated by researchers at the pharmaceutical company UCB that stably overexpressed two critical genes: XBP1, a transcription factor capable of expanding the endoplasmic reticulum and upregulating protein chaperones; and Ero1α, an oxidase that replenishes the machinery of disulphide bond formation. This host cell line, named CHO-S XE, was confirmed to have a high yield of secreted antibody. The work presented in this thesis further characterises CHO-S XE, with the aim of using the information gained to lead the generation of novel host cell lines with more optimal characteristics than CHO-S XE. In addition to antibodies, it was found that CHO-S XE had improved production of two other secreted proteins: one with a simple tertiary structure and one complex multi-domain protein; and higher levels of a number of endogenous protein chaperones. As a more controlled system of gene expression to unravel the specific roles of XBP1 and Ero1α in the secretory properties of CHO-S XE, CHO cells with inducible overexpression of XBP1, Ero1α, or a third gene involved in the Unfolded Protein Response, GADD34, were generated. From these cell lines, it was shown that more antibody was secreted by cells with induced overexpression of XBP1; however, Ero1α and GADD34 overexpression did not improve antibody yield. Further investigation revealed that endogenous XBP1 splicing was downregulated in the presence of an abundance of the active form of XBP1. This result indicated a novel aspect of the regulation of the activity of IRE1, the stress-induced endoribonuclease responsible for XBP1 splicing. Overall, the work described in this thesis confirms that the overexpression of XBP1 has an enhancing effect on the secretory properties of CHO cells; information which could contribute to the development of host cells with a greater capacity for antibody production.