2 resultados para Cellular oxygen
em Repositório Institucional da Universidade de Aveiro - Portugal
Resumo:
Low level protein synthesis errors can have profound effects on normal cell physiology and disease development, namely neurodegeneration, cancer and aging. The biology of errors introduced into proteins during mRNA translation, herein referred as mistranslation, is not yet fully understood. In order to shed new light into this biological phenomenon, we have engineered constitutive codon misreading in S. cerevisiae, using a mutant tRNA that misreads leucine CUG codons as serine, representing a 240 fold increase in mRNA translational error relative to typical physiological error (0.0001%). Our studies show that mistranslation induces autophagic activity, increases accumulation of insoluble proteins, production of reactive oxygen species, and morphological disruption of the mitochondrial network. Mistranslation also up-regulates the expression of the longevity gene PNC1, which is a regulator of Sir2p deacetylase activity. We show here that both PNC1 and SIR2 are involved in the regulation of autophagy induced by mistranslation, but not by starvation-induced autophagy. Mistranslation leads to P-body but not stress-granule assembly, down-regulates the expression of ribosomal protein genes and increases slightly the selective degradation of ribosomes (ribophagy). The study also indicates that yeast cells are much more resistant to mistranslation than expected and highlights the importance of autophagy in the cellular response to mistranslation. Morpho-functional alterations of the mitochondrial network are the most visible phenotype of mistranslation. Since most of the basic cellular processes are conserved between yeast and humans, this study reinforces the importance of yeast as a model system to study mistranslation and suggests that oxidative stress and accumulation of misfolded proteins arising from aberrant protein synthesis are important causes of the cellular degeneration observed in human diseases associated to mRNA mistranslation.
Resumo:
Photodynamic inactivation (PDI) is defined as the process of cell destruction by oxidative stress resulting from the interaction between light and a photosensitizer (PS), in the presence of molecular oxygen. PDI of bacteria has been extensively studied in recent years, proving to be a promising alternative to conventional antimicrobial agents for the treatment of superficial and localized infections. Moreover, the applicability of PDI goes far beyond the clinical field, as its potential use in water disinfection, using PS immobilized on solid supports, is currently under study. The aim of the first part of this work was to study the oxidative modifications in phospholipids, nucleic acids and proteins of Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus warneri, subjected to photodynamic treatment with cationic porphyrins. The aims of the second part of the work were to study the efficiency of PDI in aquaculture water and the influence of different physicalchemical parameters in this process, using the Gram-negative bioluminescent bacterium Vibrio fischeri, and to evaluate the possibility of recycling cationic PS immobilized on magnetic nanoparticles. To study the oxidative changes in membrane phospholipids, a lipidomic approach has been used, combining chromatographic techniques and mass spectrometry. The FOX2 assay was used to determine the concentration of lipid hydroperoxides generated after treatment. The oxidative modifications in the proteins were analyzed by one-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). Changes in the intracellular nucleic acids were analyzed by agarose gel electrophoresis and the concentration of doublestranded DNA was determined by fluorimetry. The oxidative changes of bacterial PDI at the molecular level were analyzed by infrared spectroscopy. In laboratory tests, bacteria (108 CFU mL-1) were irradiated with white light (4.0 mW cm-2) after incubation with the PS (Tri-Py+-Me-PF or Tetra-Py+-Me) at concentrations of 0.5 and 5.0 μM for S. warneri and E. coli, respectively. Bacteria were irradiated with different light doses (up to 9.6 J cm-2 for S. warneri and up to 64.8 J cm-2 for E. coli) and the changes were evaluated throughout the irradiation time. In the study of phospholipids, only the porphyrin Tri-Py+-Me-PF and a light dose of 64.8 J cm-2 were tested. The efficiency of PDI in aquaculture has been evaluated in two different conditions: in buffer solution, varying temperature, pH, salinity and oxygen concentration, and in aquaculture water samples, to reproduce the conditions of PDI in situ. The kinetics of the process was determined in realtime during the experiments by measuring the bioluminescence of V. fischeri (107 CFU mL-1, corresponding to a level of bioluminescence of 105 relative light units). A concentration of 5.0 μM of Tri-Py+-Me-PF was used in the experiments with buffer solution, and 10 to 50 μM in the experiments with aquaculture water. Artificial white light (4.0 mW cm-2) and solar irradiation (40 mW cm-2) were used as light sources.