63 resultados para Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins


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A wealth of evidence suggests a role for brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and its receptor tropomyosin-related kinase B (TrkB) in the aetiology of depression and in the mode of action of antidepressant drugs. Less clear is the involvement of this neurotrophin in other stress-related pathologies such as anxiety disorders. The dorsal periaqueductal grey matter (DPAG), a midbrain area rich in BDNF and TrkB receptor mRNAs and proteins, has been considered a key structure in the pathophysiology of panic disorder. In this study we investigated the effect of intra-DPAG injection of BDNF in a proposed animal model of panic: the escape response evoked by the electrical stimulation of the same midbrain area. To this end, the intensity of electrical current that needed to be applied to DPAG to evoke escape behaviour was measured before and after microinjection of BDNF. We also assessed whether 5-HT- or GABA-related mechanisms may account for the putative behavioural/autonomic effects of the neurotrophin. BDNF (0.05, 0.1, 0.2 ng) dose-dependently inhibited escape performance, suggesting a panicolytic-like effect. Local microinjection of K252a, an antagonist of TrkB receptors, or bicuculline, a GABA(A) receptor antagonist, blocked this effect. Intra-DPAG administration of WAY-100635 or ketanserin, respectively 5-HT(1A) and 5-HT(2A/2c) receptor antagonists, did not alter BDNF`s effects on escape. Bicuculline also blocked the inhibitory effect of BDNF on mean arterial pressure increase caused by electrical stimulation of DPAG. Therefore, in the DPAG, BDNF-TrkB signalling interacts with the GABAergic system to cause a panicolytic-like effect.

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Trichophyton rubrum is the most common etiological agent of human dermatophytosis. Despite the incidence and medical importance of this dermatophyte, little is known about the mechanisms of host invasion and pathogenicity. Host invasion depends on the adaptive cellular responses of the pathogen that allow it to penetrate the skin layers, which are mainly composed of proteins and lipids. In this study, we used suppression subtractive hybridization to identify transcripts over-expressed in T rubrum cultured in lipid as carbon source. Among the subtractive cDNA clones isolated, 85 clones were positively screened by cDNA array dot blotting and were sequenced. The putative proteins encoded by the isolated transcripts showed similarities to fungal proteins involved in metabolism, signaling, defense, and virulence, such as the MDR/ABC transporter, glucan 1,3-beta-glucosidase, chitin synthase B, copper-sulfate-regulated protein, and serine/threonine phosphatase (calcineurin A). These results provide the first molecular insight into the genes differentially expressed during the adaptation of T. rubrum to a lipidic carbon source.

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The dorsal surface of the tongue of the bullfrog, Rana catesbeiana, has simple columnar epithelium with a few ciliated cells and goblet cells. The entire surface is covered with numerous filiform papillae and few fungiform. Filiform papillae have a simple columnar epithelium with secretory cells, while the fungiform have a sensory disc on their upper surface the lined by a stratified columnar epithelium with basal, peripheral, glandular and receptor cells. Over the dorsal lingual surface there are numerous winding tubular glands, which penetrate deeply into the muscle of the tongue, mingling with the fibers. The gland epithelium is cylindrical with secretory and supporting cells. The first are absolute on the basis of the gland and the latter are rare in the upper third. The ventral surface of the tongue is lined by a stratified epithelium, with the presence of goblet cells, with ciliated cells among them. Morphometrically, lingual glands varies in length, according to their location: shorter in the anterior region of the tongue (330 mu m) than in the posterior region (450 mu m). Secretory cells of the anterior lingual glands are smaller (1457.7 mm(3)) than the posterior ones (2645.9 mu m(3)). The same can be said of the cell nuclei, 130.0 mu m(3) for the anterior glands and 202.3 mu m(3) for the posterior ones. Secretory cells of the lingual glands contain substances rich in protein and neutral mucopolysaccharides, which characterize the seromucous type. Goblet cells of the dorsal and ventral surface epithelia secrete neutral mucopolysaccharides and proteins, and can be characterized as type G1 cells, and the supporting cells of the superficial glands of the fungiform papillae secrete a mucus rich in neutral mucopolysaccharides, sulfomucins and sialomucins.