178 resultados para 11-diene synthase


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Chapters 3 and 15 of Joyce's Ulysses exhibit glimpses of three dreams, fantasies and eventual nightmares linked to the figure of 'Haroun al Raschid.' Historically speaking, the latter was a powerful Caliph of Baghdad, a medieval potentate about whom many of the most memorable of The Thousand and One Nights or The Arabian Nights' Entertainments were once and then again spun as tales of pleasure. Joyce seizes upon the figure of 'Haroun al Raschid' as a fictive measure to articulate the 'orientalist' fantasies of Stephen Dedalus and Leopold Bloom. However, this evocative figure of Near Eastern history, of fabulous narrative and the progressively converging fantasies of two modern European literary characters is riddled with paradox. Such material provides Joyce a perceptive and proleptic sense of the paradoxes and brutal historical contradictions through which Western and Eastern dreams of theocratic nationalism, ethnic zealotry, colonial rebellion and Zionism are to be played out. W. B. Yeats' poem 'The Gift of Harun al-Raschid', written in 1923, the year after the book publication of Ulysses, provides both a fitting foil and a significant socio-historical point of reference for Joyce's own figurative use of the Caliph of Baghdad.

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Diabetes is associated with oxidative stress and increased levels of inflammatory cytokines. The aim of the study was to assess the effects of inflammatory cytokines and oxidative stress associated with raised glucose levels on inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) promoter activity in intestinal epithelial cells. High glucose (25 mmol/l) conditions reduced glutathione (GSH) levels in the human intestinal epithelial cell line, DLD-1. Addition of the antioxidant alpha-lipoic acid resulted in the restoration of GSH levels to normal. Upregulation of basal iNOS promoter activity was observed when cells were incubated in high glucose alone. This effect was significantly reduced by the addition of the antioxidant, alpha-lipoic acid and completely blocked with inhibition of NFkappa B activity. Cytokine stimulation [interleukin-1 beta, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, interferon-gamma] induced iNOS promoter activity in all conditions and this was accompanied by an increase in nitric oxide (NO) production. Inhibition of NFkappa-B activity decreased but did not completely inhibit cytokine-induced iNOS promoter activity and subsequent NO production. In conclusion, high glucose-induced iNOS promoter activity is mediated in part through intracellular GSH and NFkappa-B.

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This article draws on the author's experience of living and working in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Connections between the traumatic events of September 11 and the situation in the north of Ireland of ongoing civil conflict and violence are developed and aspects of therapeutic practice are described. Coping with the effects of trauma presents systemic therapists with multiple and complex challenges in whatever sociopolitical context they practice. A therapist stance that combines flexibility and openness of attitude with the creative use of therapeutic practices, including those from other modalities, will assist systemic therapists in rising to these challenges.

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Thymidylate synthase (TS) is a critical target for chemotherapeutic agents such as 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and antifolates such as tomudex (TDX),multitargeted antifolate, and ZD9331. Using the MCF-7 breast cancer line, we have developed p53 wild-type (M7TS90) and null (M7TS90-E6) isogenic lines with inducible TS expression (approximately 6-fold induction compared with control after 48 h). In the M7TS90 line, inducible TS expression resulted in a moderate approximately 3-fold increase in 5-FU IC-50(72 h) dose and a dramatic >20-fold increase in the IC-50(72 h) doses of TDX, multitargeted antifolate, and ZD9331. S-phase cell cycle arrest and apoptosis induced by the antifolates were abrogated by TS induction. In contrast, cell cycle arrest and apoptosis induced by 5-FU was unaffected by TS expression levels. Inactivation of p53 significantly increased resistance to 5-FU and the antifolates with IC-50(72 h) doses for 5-FU and TDX of >100 and >10 microM, respectively, in the M7TS90-E6 cell line. Furthermore, p53 inactivation completely abrogated the cell cycle arrest and apoptosis induced by 5-FU. The antifolates induced S-phase arrest in the p53 null cell line; however, the induction of apoptosis by these agents was significantly reduced compared with p53 wild-type cells. Both inducible TS expression and the addition of exogenous thymidine (10 microM) blocked p53 and p21 induction by the antifolates but not by 5-FU in the M7TS90 cell line. Similarly, inducible TS expression and exogenous thymidine abrogated antifolate but not 5-FU-mediated up-regulation of Fas/CD95 in M7TS90 cells. Our results indicate that in M7TS90 cells, inducible TS expression modulates p53 and p53 target gene expression in response to TS-targeted antifolate therapies but not to 5-FU.

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The G894T endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) polymorphism results in a Glu to Asp substitution at position 298. This position is located externally on the protein and as the regulation of eNOS is dependent on its subcellular localization and interaction with modulatory proteins, we aimed to address whether the substitution of Asp at 298 had any effect on these mechanisms. Initially, we developed a novel method to accurately determine molar quantities of each variant by expressing them as green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusion proteins and using recombinant adenoviruses to facilitate transient infection of human microvascular endothelial cells. Sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and Western blotting of eNOS298Asp revealed a 135-kDa proteolytic fragment which was not present with eNOS298Glu. This proteolysis was prevented by using LDS buffer confirming that this differential cleavage is an artefact of sample preparation and unlikely to occur intracellularly. Nitric oxide was measured following stimulation with calcium ionophore or oestrogen in the presence of varying sepiapterin concentrations. GFP fluorescence was used to quantify the amount of fusion protein and calculate intracellular specific activity. There was no significant difference in intracellular specific activity between Glu298 and Asp298 eNOS in response to calcium ionophore or oestrogen. Tetrahydrobiopterin supplementation increased eNOS activity of both variants in an identical manner. The presence of the GFP also facilitated the visualization of the variants by confocal microscopy and demonstrated that both localized to the plasma membrane and the Golgi. These findings demonstrate that the Asp substitution at 298 does not have a major effect in modulating eNOS activity in vivo.

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Background Estrogen acutely activates endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS). However, the identity of the receptors involved in this rapid response remains unclear. Methods and Results We detected an estrogen receptor (ER) transcript in human endothelial cells that encodes a truncated 46-kDa ER (1a-hER-46). A corresponding 46-kDa ER protein was identified in endothelial cell lysates. Transfection of cDNAs encoding the full-length ER (ER-66) and 1a-hER-46 resulted in appropriately sized recombinant proteins identified by anti-ER antibodies. Confocal microscopy revealed that a proportion of both ER-66 and hER-46 was localized outside the nucleus and mediated specific cell-surface binding of estrogen as assessed by FITC-conjugated, BSA-estrogen binding studies. Both ER isoforms colocalized with eNOS and mediated acute activation of eNOS in response to estrogen stimulation. However, estrogen-stimulated transcriptional activation mediated by 1a-hER-46 was much less than with ER-66. Furthermore, 1a-hER-46 inhibited classical hER-66 mediated transcriptional activation in a dominant-negative fashion. Conclusions These findings suggest that expression of an alternatively spliced, truncated ER isoform in human endothelial cells confers a unique ability to mediate acute but not transcriptional responses to estrogen.

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Objectives: Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) is an essential cofactor for endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) activity. BH4 levels are regulated by de novo biosynthesis; the rate-limiting enzyme is GTP cyclohydrolase I (GTPCH). BH4 activates and promotes homodimerisation of purified eNOS protein, but the intracellular mechanisms underlying BH4-mediated eNOS regulation in endothelial cells remain less clear. We aimed to investigate the role of BH4 levels in intracellular eNOS regulation, by targeting the BH4 synthetic pathway as a novel strategy to modulate intracellular BH4 levels. Methods: We constructed a recombinant adenovirus, AdGCH, encoding human GTPCH. We infected human endothelial cells with AdGCH, investigated the changes in intracellular biopterin levels, and determined the effects on eNOS enzymatic activity, protein levels and dimerisation. Results: GTPCH gene transfer in EAhy926 endothelial cells increased BH4 >10-fold compared with controls (cells alone or control adenovirus infection), and greatly enhanced NO production in a dose-dependent, eNOS-specific manner. We found that eNOS was principally monomeric in control cells, whereas GTPCH gene transfer resulted in a striking increase in eNOS homodimerisation. Furthermore, the total amounts of both native eNOS protein and a recombinant eNOS–GFP fusion protein were significantly increased following GTPCH gene transfer. Conclusions: These findings suggest that GTPCH gene transfer is a valid approach to increase BH4 levels in human endothelial cells, and provide new evidence for the relative importance of different mechanisms underlying BH4-mediated eNOS regulation in intact human endothelial cells. Additionally, these observations suggest that GTPCH may be a rational target to augment endothelial BH4 and normalise eNOS activity in endothelial dysfunction states.