239 resultados para STAT ACTIVATION


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Purpose: Suppressor of cytokine signalling (SOCS) proteins are feedback inhibitors of the JAK/STAT pathway. SOCS3 critically controls STAT3 activation, cytokine signalling and inflammatory gene expression in macrophages and microglia. In this study, we investigated the role of SOCS3/STAT3 in myeloid cells in the initiation and progression of diabetic retinopathy (DR). 
Methods: Mice with a conditional deletion of SOCS3 in myeloid cells (LysMCre-SOCS3 fl/fl) and C57BL/6J (as control) were rendered diabetic by a low-dose multiple intraperitoneal injections of Stroptozocine. Diabetes related retinal changes, including leukostasis, acellular capilliaries, and microglial activation were assessed at different stages of disease. Bone marrow derived macrophages (BMDMs) from LysMCreSOCS3 fl/fl and C57BL/6J mice were cultured in high glucose (HG) medium, and cell activation was evaluated by real-time RT-PCR.
Results: In C57BL/6J diabetic mice the expression of phosphorylated STAT3 (pSTAT3) was increased and SOCS3 was decreased in the retina. Interleukin 6 (IL-6), the main cytokine that stimulates STAT3 activation, was increased in the plamsa in diabetic mice. Although blood glucose levels and Hbac-1 were comparable between LysMCre-SOCS3fl/fl and WT mice after STZ injection, the LysMCreSOCS3 fl/fl diabetic mice developed severe retinal vasculopathy, including increased leukostasis and microglial activation at one month and enhanced acellular capillary formation at 6 months after diabetes induction. 
Conclusions: our study suggests that the JAK/STAT3 pathway is involved in the initiation and progression of DR, and uncontrolled STAT3 activation results in accelerated DR progression. Targeting the STAT3 pathway may be a novel approach for the management of DR.

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The activation of oxygen molecules is an important issue in the gold-catalyzed partial oxidation of alcohols in aqueous solution. The complexity of the solution arising from a large number of solvent molecules makes it difficult to study the reaction in the system. In this work, O-2 activation on an Au catalyst is investigated using an effective approach to estimate the reaction barriers in the presence of solvent. Our calculations show that O-2 can be activated, undergoing OOH* in the presence of water molecules. The OOH* can readily be formed on Au(211) via four possible pathways with almost equivalent free energy barriers at the aqueous-solid interface: the direct or indirect activation of O-2 by surface hydrogen or the hydrolysis of O-2 following a Langmuir-Hinshelwood mechanism or an Eley-Rideal mechanism. Among them, the Eley-Rideal mechanism may be slightly more favorable due to the restriction of the low coverage of surface H on Au(211) in the other mechanisms. The results shed light on the importance of water molecules on the activation of oxygen in gold-catalyzed systems. Solvent is found to facilitate the oxygen activation process mainly by offering extra electrons and stabilizing the transition states. A correlation between the energy barrier and the negative charge of the reaction center is found. The activation barrier is substantially reduced by the aqueous environment, in which the first solvation shell plays the most important role in the barrier reduction. Our approach may be useful for estimating the reaction barriers in aqueous systems.

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Highly efficient In2O3-Co3O4 catalysts were prepared for ultralow-temperature CO oxidation by simultaneously tuning the CO adsorption strength and oxygen activation over a Co3O4 surface, which could completely convert CO to CO2 at temperatures as low as -105 degrees C compared to -40 degrees C over pure Co3O4, with enhanced stability.

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Crystals of graphite nanosheets, achieved via a simple ball milling approach, show a significant size effect in electrocatalytic activation of oxygen.

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Lung infection by Burkholderia species, in particular B. cenocepacia, accelerates tissue damage and increase post-lung transplant mortality in cystic fibrosis patients. Host- microbes interplay largely depends on interactions between pathogen specific molecules and innate immune receptors such as the Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4), which recognizes the lipid A moiety of the bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS). The human TLR4/MD-2 LPS receptor complex is strongly activated by hexa-acylated lipid A and poorly activated by underacylated lipid A. Here, we report that B. cenocepacia LPS strongly activates human TLR4/MD-2 despite its lipid A having only five acyl chains. Further, we show that aminoarabinose residues in lipid A contribute to TLR4-lipid A interactions, and experiments in a mouse model of LPS-induced endotoxic shock confirmed the pro- inflammatory potential of B. cenocepacia penta-acylated lipid A. Molecular modeling, combined with mutagenesis of TLR4-MD2 interactive surfaces, suggests that longer acyl chains and the aminoarabinose residues in the B. cenocepacia lipid A allow exposure of the fifth acyl chain on the surface of MD-2 enabling interactions with TLR4 and its dimerization. Our results provide a molecular model for activation of the human TLR4/MD- 2 complex by penta-acylated lipid A, explaining the ability of hypoacylated B. cenocepacia LPS to promote pro- inflammatory responses associated to the severe pathogenicity of this opportunistic bacterium.

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Purpose: To compare white blood cell populations from persons with neovascular age-related macular degeneration (nAMD) with that of age-matched controls.

Methods: Immunophenotyping for white blood cell populations (including CD14++CD16-, CD14++CD16+ and CD14+CD16++ monocytes, CD4 and CD8 T-lymphocytes, CD56 natural killer cells, CD19 B-lymphocytes and CD16+HLA-DR- neutrophils), chemokine receptor expression analysis (CX3CR1 and CCR2) as well as cell activation analysis (MHC-II, HLA-DR, CD62L, STAT3) was performed using samples of peripheral blood from nAMD patients and age- and gender-matched controls.

Results: The percentage of CD4+ T cells was significantly reduced while the percentage of CD11b+ cells and CD16+HLA-DR- neutrophils was significantly increased in nAMD patients compared to controls. The percentage of classical (CD14++CD16-), intermediate (CD14++CD16+) and non-classical (CD14+CD16++) monocytes was similar between nAMD patients and controls, however there was a significant increase of CX3CR1 on the intermediate monocyte subset and on CD16+HLA-DR- neutrophils in nAMD compared to controls. HLA-DR was significantly increased in all monocyte subsets in nAMD compared to controls. Activation of Signal Transducer and Activator of Transcription 3 (STAT3) was significantly increased in nAMD patients compared to controls following stimulation with IL6.

Conclusions: Our results suggest an increased activation of the innate immune system in patients with nAMD. A better understanding of the role of the innate immune system in the pathogenesis of nAMD may help identify novel biomarkers and thus development of improved therapeutic strategies.

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Purpose: The canonical Wnt signaling is activated by retinal injury. Under disease conditions, the Wnt mediates inflammatory responses. Inflammation has been detected in age-related macular degeneration (AMD) retinas and Ccl2-/-/Cx3cr1-/- (DKO) mice with or without rd8 background, a model with progressive AMD-like lesions including focal photoreceptor/RPE degeneration and A2E accumulation. We evaluated the effects of Wnt-β-catenin activation and an antibody against LRP6, the co-receptor of Wnt on these two models.

Methods: anti-LRP6 antibody (2F1, 1 μl of 5 μg/μL) was intravitreally injected into the right eyes in 3 separate experiments (DKOrd8, N=35; DKO, N=10). The left eyes were injected with mouse IgG as controls. Fundoscopy was taken before injection and sequentially monthly after injection. Two months after injection, light-adapted ERG responses were recorded; then the eyes were harvested for histopathology, the determination of retinal A2E, and molecular analysis. The microarray of ocular mRNA of 92 Wnt genes was compared between the treated and the control eyes. The phosphorylated types of LRP6 and β-catenin and endogenous forms of the proteins were assayed by Western blotting.

Results: For DKOrd8 mice, the fundus showed a slower progression or alleviation of retinal lesions in the right eyes as compared to the left eyes. Among 35 pairs of eyes, 26 (74.3%) were improved, 7 (20%) stayed the same and 2 (5.7%) remained progressing. Histology confirmed the clinical observation. Light-adapted ERG of the treated eyes exhibited larger amplitudes compared to control eyes (n=6), with greater improvements under UV light stimulus. There was a significantly lower A2E in the treated eyes compared to controls. Microarray of 92 Wnt genes expression pattern was similar in both eyes. Western blotting indicated local administration of 2F1 antibody to suppress the activation of Wnt pathway in the retina. For DKO mice, the treatment improved ERG but less effect on RPE degeneration.

Conclusions: The canonical Wnt signaling plays a role in the focal retina lesion of both DKOrd8 and DKO mice; and intravitreal anti-LRP6 antibody might be neuroprotective via deactivation of canonical Wnt pathway.