2 resultados para MOLECULAR CONTROL

em Repositório Institucional da Universidade de Aveiro - Portugal


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Type 2 diabetes is one of the most common metabolic disorders in the world. Globally, the prevalence of this disorder is predicted to increase, along with the risk of developing diabetic related complications. One of those complications is diabetic nephropathy, defined by a progressive increase in proteinuria and a gradual decline in renal function. Approximately 25% to 30% of type 2 diabetic individuals develop this complication. However, its underlying genetic mechanisms remain unclear. Thus, the aim of this study is to contribute to the discovery of the genetic mechanisms involved in the development and progression of diabetic nephropathy, through the identification of relevant genetic variants in Portuguese type 2 diabetic individuals. The exomes of 36 Portuguese type 2 diabetic individuals were sequenced on the Ion ProtonTM Sequencer. From those individuals, 19 did not present diabetic nephropathy, being included in the control group, while the 17 individuals that presented the diabetic complication formed the case group. A statistical analysis was then performed to identify candidate common genetic variants, as well as genes accumulating rare variants that could be associated with diabetic nephropathy. From the search for common variants in the study population, the statistically significant (p-value ≤ 0.05) variants rs1051303 and rs1131620 in the LTBP4 gene, rs660339 in UCP2, rs2589156 in RPTOR, rs2304483 in the SLC12A3 gene and rs10169718 present in ARPC2, were considered as the most biologically relevant to the pathogenesis of diabetic nephropathy. The variants rs1051303 and rs1131620, as well as the variants rs660339 and rs2589156 were associated with protective effects in the development of the complication, while rs2304483 and rs10169718 were considered risk variants, being present in individuals with diagnosed diabetic nephropathy. In the rare variants approach, the genes with statistical significance (p-value ≤ 0.05) found, the STAB1 gene, accumulating 9 rare variants, and the CUX1 gene, accumulating 2 rare variants, were identified as the most relevant. Both genes were considered protective, with the accumulated rare variants mainly present in the group without the renal complication. The present study provides an initial analysis of the genetic evidence associated with the development and progression of diabetic nephropathy, and the results obtained may contribute to a deeper understanding of the genetic mechanisms associated with this diabetic complication.

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The function of a complex nervous system relies on an intricate interaction between neurons and glial cells. However, as glial cells are generally born distant from the place where they settle, molecular cues are important to direct their migration. Glial cell migration is important in both normal development and disease, thus current research in the laboratory has been focused on dissecting regulatory events underlying that crucial process. With this purpose, the Drosophila eye imaginal disc has been used as a model. In response to neuronal photoreceptor differentiation, glial cells migrate from the CNS into the eye disc where they act to correctly wrap axons. To ensure proper development, attractive and repulsive signals must coordinate glial cell migration. Importantly, one of these signals is Bnl, a Fibroblast Growth Factor (FGF) ligand expressed by retinal progenitor cells that was suggested to act as a non-autonomous negative regulator of excessive glial cell migration (overmigration) by binding and activating the Btl receptor expressed by glial cells. Through the experimental results described in chapter 3 we gained a detailed insight into the function of bnl in eye disc growth, photoreceptor development, and glia migration. Interestingly, we did not find a direct correlation between the defects on the ongoing photoreceptors and the glia overmigration phenotype; however, bnl knockdown caused apoptosis of eye progenitor cells what was strongly correlated with glia migration defects. Glia overmigration due to Bnl down-regulation in eye progenitor cells was rescued by inhibiting the pro-apoptotic genes or caspases activity, as well as, by depleting JNK or Dp53 function in retinal progenitor cells. Thus, we suggest a cross-talk between those developmental signals in the control of glia migration at a distance. Importantly, these results suggest that Bnl does not control glial migration in the eye disc exclusively through its ability to bind and activate its receptor Btl in glial cells. We also discuss possible biological roles for the glia overmigration in the bnl knockdown background. Previous results in the lab showed an interaction between dMyc, a master regulator of tissue growth, and Dpp, a Transforming Growth Factor-β important for retinal patterning and for accurate glia migration into the eye disc. Thus, we became interested in understanding putative relationships between Bnl and dMyc. In chapter 4, we show that they positively cooperate in order to ensure proper development of the eye disc. This work highlights the importance of the FGF signaling in eye disc development and reveals a signaling network where a range of extra- and intra-cellular signals cooperate to non-autonomously control glial cell migration. Therefore, such inter-relations could be important in other Drosophila cellular contexts, as well as in vertebrate tissue development.