239 resultados para Co-enzyme Q10
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Les forêts dont le volume sur pied augmente contribuent à atténuer les changements climatiques et constituent un puits de carbone. En Suisse, seul très peu d'entreprises forestières valorisent le service de puits de carbone. Ce travail vise à chercher les raisons expliquant cette réticence. Les facteurs politiques et juridiques influençant les décisions des entreprises forestières sont analysées à l'aide du modèle des régimes institutionnels de ressource. Les résultats obtenus sont vérifiés et complétés à l'aide d'informations collectées lors d'interviews d'experts menées auprès d'entreprises forestières et décideurs politiques. Cette étude identifie des facteurs favorisant ou entravant la valorisation du service de puits de carbone des forêts et propose des options d'action.
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Purified monoclonal antibodies (Mab) produced by 3 hybridomas and reacting with 3 different epitopes of carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) were used in a solid phase enzyme immunoassay. Two Mabs were physically adsorbed to polystyrene balls and the third Mab was coupled to alkaline phosphatase using the bifunctional reagent N-succinimidyl-3-(2-pyridyldithio)-propionate. During a first incubation, CEA from heat-extracted serum samples was immunoadsorbed to the antibody coated balls. After washing of the balls, bound CEA was detected by a second incubation with the enzyme coupled Mab. The sensitivity of the assay was 0.6 ng per ml of serum. A total of 196 serum samples from patients with various types of carcinoma, with liver cirrhosis, or from healthy blood donors with or without smoking habits, were tested. The results obtained with the monoclonal enzyme immunoassay (M-EIA) were compared with those obtained with perchloric acid extracts of the same serum samples tested by an inhibition radioimmunoassay using conventional goat anti-CEA antiserum. There was an excellent correlation between the two assays. In particular, the new M-EIA gave good results for the detection of tumor recurrences in the follow-up of colon carcinoma patients. However, despite the use of exclusively monoclonal antibodies the new assay detected a similar percentage of slightly elevated CEA values as the conventional assay in patients with non-malignant disease, suggesting that the CEA associated with non-malignant diseases is immunologically identical to the CEA released by colon carcinoma.
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Fas (CD95/Apo-1) ligand is a potent inducer of apoptosis and one of the major killing effector mechanisms of cytotoxic T cells. Thus, Fas ligand activity has to be tightly regulated, involving various transcriptional and post-transcriptional processes. For example, preformed Fas ligand is stored in secretory lysosomes of activated T cells, and rapidly released by degranulation upon reactivation. In this study, we analyzed the minimal requirements for activation-induced degranulation of Fas ligand. T cell receptor activation can be mimicked by calcium ionophore and phorbol ester. Unexpectedly, we found that stimulation with phorbol ester alone is sufficient to trigger Fas ligand release, whereas calcium ionophore is neither sufficient nor necessary. The relevance of this process was confirmed in primary CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells and NK cells. Although the activation of protein kinase(s) was absolutely required for Fas ligand degranulation, protein kinase C or A were not involved. Previous reports have shown that preformed Fas ligand co-localizes with other markers of cytolytic granules. We found, however, that the activation-induced degranulation of Fas ligand has distinct requirements and involves different mechanisms than those of the granule markers CD63 and CD107a/Lamp-1. We conclude that activation-induced degranulation of Fas ligand in cytotoxic lymphocytes is differently regulated than other classical cytotoxic granule proteins.
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Abstract : Post-translational modifications such as proteolytic processing, phosphorylation, and glycosylation, add extra layers of complexity to proteomes and allow a finely tuned regulation of the activity of many proteins. The evolutionarily conserved cell-cycle and transcriptional regulator HCP-] is regulated by proteolytic maturation via which a stable heterodirneric complex of two cleaved subunits is formed from a single precursor protein. The human HCF-1 precursor is cleaved at six nearly identical 26 amino acid sequence repeats, called HCF-1pro repeats, which represent uncommon protease recognition sites dedicated to human HCF-1 proteolysis. This proteolytic maturation process is conserved in vertebrate HCF-1 homologues and is essential for the functions of the human protein in cell-cycle regulation; the mechanisms that execute and control HCF-1 proteolysis, however, remain poorly understood. In this dissertation I investigate the mechanisms of proteolytic maturation of HCF-1 proteins in different species. I show that the Drosophila homolog of human HCF-1, called dHCP, is proteolytically cleaved via a different mechanism than human HCF-1. dHCP is processed by the same protease, called Taspase], which cleaves one of the key developmental regulators in flies, the Trithorax protein. Maturation of HCP proteins via Taspase] cleavage is probably not particular to dHCP as many invertebrate HCP proteins, particularly insects and flatworms, possess Taspase] recognition sites. In contrast, the vertebrate HCF-1 proteins lack Taspase] recognition sites and the HCF-1pro repeats are not Taspase1 substrates, suggesting that multiple mechanisms for HCF-1 proteolytic maturation have appeared during evolution. I also show that the proteolytic activity responsible for the cleavage of the HCP- 1pro repeats is very difficult to characterize, being resistant to most protease inhibitors and very sensitive to biochemical fractionation. Moreover, the HCF-1pro repeats represent complex protease recognition sites and I demonstrate that, in addition to be the HCF-1 cleavage sites, these repeated sequences, also recruit the OG1cNAc transferase OGT. The OGT protein and the OG1cNAc modification of HCF-1 are both important for HCF-1pro repeat proteolysis. Interestingly, a human recombinant OGT purified from insect cells is able to induce cleavage of a HCF-1pro-repeat precursor in vitro, indicating that OGT either (i) induces HCF-1 autoproteolysis,(ii) is the HCF-1pro- repeat proteolytic activity itself, or (iii) physically associates with a proteolytic activity that is conserved in insect cells. In any case, OGT plays an important role in HCF-1 proteolytic maturation and perhaps a broader role in HCF-1 biological function. Résumé : Les modifications post-traductionelles pomme le clivage protéolytique, la phosphorylation, et la glycosylation, augmentent significativement la complexité des protéomes et permettent une régulation fine de l'activité de beaucoup de protéines. La protéine HCF-1, qui est un régulateur du cycle cellulaire et de la transcription, est elle- même régulée par clivage protéolytique. La protéine HCF-1 est en effet coupée en deux sous-unités qui s'associent l'une a l'autre pour former la protéine mature. Le précurseur de la protéine HCF-1 humaine est clivé à six sites correspondant à six séquences répétées nommées les HCF-1pro repeats, chacune composée de 26 acide aminés. Les HCF-1pro- repeats ne ressemblent ai aucune séquence de clivage protéolytique connue et sont présentes seulement dans les protéines HCF-1 chez les vertébrés. Bien que la maturation protéolytique d'HCF-1 soit essentielle pour les activités de cette protéine pendant le cycle cellulaire, les mécanismes qui la contrôlent restent inconnus. Au cours de mon travail de thèse, j'ai analysé les mécanismes de clivage protéolytique des protéines HCF dans différentes espèces. J'ai montré que la protéine de Drosophile homologue d'HCF-1 humaine nommée dHCF est clivée par une protéase nommée Taspase1. Ainsi, dHCF est clivé par la même protéase que celle qui induit la maturation protéolytique d'un des principaux facteurs du développement chez la mouche, la protéine Trithorax. La maturation de dHCF via le clivage par la Taspase1 n'est pas spécifique à la mouche, mais est probablement étendu à plusieurs protéines HCF chez les invertébrés, surtout dans les familles des insectes et des plathehninthes, car ces protéines HCF présentent des sites de reconnaissance pour la Taspasel. Par contre, les protéines HCF-1 chez les vertébrés n'ont pas de sites de reconnaissance pour la Taspasel et cela suggère que différents mécanismes de maturation des protéines HCF- ls ont apparu au cours de l'évolution. J'ai montré aussi que les HCF-1pro-repeats sont clivés par une activité protéolytique très difficile a identifier, car elle est résistante à la plupart des inhibiteurs de protéases, mais elle est très sensible au fractionnement biochimique. En plus, les HCF-1pro-repeats sont un site de protéolyse complexe qui ne sert pas seulement au clivage des protéines HCF- chez les vertébrés mais aussi à recruter l'enzyme responsable de la O- GlcNAcylation nommée OGT. La protéine OGT et la O-GlcNAcylatio d'HCF-1 sont toutes les deux importantes pour le clivage protéolytique des HCF1pro-repeats. Curieusement, la protéine OGT humaine produite dans des cellules d'insectes est capable de cliver les HCF-1pro repeats in vitro et cela suggère que OGT soit (i) induit le clivage autocatalytique cl'HCF-1, soit (ii) est elle-même l'activité protéolytique qui clive HCF4, soit (iii) est associée à une activité protéolytique conservée dans les cellules d'insectes qui a été co-purifiée avec OGT. En conclusion, OGT joue un rôle important dans la maturation protéolytique d'HCF-1 et peut-être aussi un rôle plus large dans les fonctions biologiques de la protéine HCF-1.
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Degradation of unsaturated fatty acids through the peroxisomal beta-oxidation pathway requires the participation of auxiliary enzymes in addition to the enzymes of the core beta-oxidation cycle. The auxiliary enzyme delta(3,5),delta(2,4)-dienoyl-coenzyme A (CoA) isomerase has been well studied in yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) and mammals, but no plant homolog had been identified and characterized at the biochemical or molecular level. A candidate gene (At5g43280) was identified in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) encoding a protein showing homology to the rat (Rattus norvegicus) delta(3,5),delta(2,4)-dienoyl-CoA isomerase, and possessing an enoyl-CoA hydratase/isomerase fingerprint as well as aspartic and glutamic residues shown to be important for catalytic activity of the mammalian enzyme. The protein, named AtDCI1, contains a peroxisome targeting sequence at the C terminus, and fusion of a fluorescent protein to AtDCI1 directed the chimeric protein to the peroxisome in onion (Allium cepa) cells. AtDCI1 expressed in Escherichia coli was shown to have delta(3,5),delta(2,4)-dienoyl-CoA isomerase activity in vitro. Furthermore, using the synthesis of polyhydroxyalkanoate in yeast peroxisomes as an analytical tool to study the beta-oxidation cycle, expression of AtDCI1 was shown to complement the yeast mutant deficient in the delta(3,5),delta(2,4)-dienoyl-CoA isomerase, thus showing that AtDCI1 is also appropriately targeted to the peroxisome in yeast and has delta(3,5),delta(2,4)-dienoyl-CoA isomerase activity in vivo. The AtDCI1 gene is expressed constitutively in several tissues, but expression is particularly induced during seed germination. Proteins showing high homology with AtDCI1 are found in gymnosperms as well as angiosperms belonging to the Monocotyledon or Dicotyledon classes.
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RESUME La dissémination extramédullaire des cellules blastiques est une complication majeure des leucémies myéloïdes (LMA) ou lymphoïdes aiguës (LLA). La migration des cellules blastiques dépend de mécanismes semblables à ceux qui régulent la migration des leucocytes dans un site d'inflammation. Parmi ceux-ci, les oligosaccharides fucosylés décorant les ligands des sélectines jouent un rôle clé en interagissant avec les sélectines. PSGL-1 (P-Selectin Glycoprotein Ligand-1) est une protéine de 240 kD, exprimée à la surface des leucocytes, permettant de soutenir le roulement leucocytaire sur les sélectines, le long de la paroi vasculaire. L'interaction de PSGL-1 avec les sélectines nécessite des modifications post-traductionnelles de type sialylation, sulfatation , N et 0-glycosylation. Parmi les enzymes impliqués, les α1,3-fucosyltransférases jouent un rôle important dans la biosynthèse d'oligosaccharides fucosylés, ligands des sélectines (sLex, Lex, VIM-2, CLA). Comme l'expression des α1,3-fucosyltransférases par les cellules blastiques leucémiques n'a pas été étudiée précédemment, nous l'avons recherchée dans 120 cas de leucémies aiguës. Les ARNm des FucT-IV et -VII ont été détectés, par RT-PCR, dans tous les cas testés. L'ARNm de la FucT-IX n'a été observé que dans 40% des leucémies aiguës (48/120). L'ARNm de la FucT-IX est détecté dans 65% des LMA (47/72) et, moins fréquemment, dans 26% des LLA (11/42). A noter que les cas de LLA exprimant la FucT-IX correspondent essentiellement à des LLA secondaires à la transformation d'une leucémie myéloïde chronique ou des LLA de la lignée B de type leucémie/lymphome de Burkitt. L'expression de PSGL-1 et des oligosaccharides fucosylés par les blastes varie significativement parmi les LMA et les LLA : Lex, VIM-2 et sLex étant exprimés plus fréquemment par les myéloblastes que par les lymphoblastes. Le rôle des FucT-IV, -VII et -IX dans la synthèse des Lex, VIM-2, CLA et sLex a été examiné en exprimant l'ADNc de chaque FucT dans des cellules CHO. L'immunophénotypisation des transfectants indique que la FucT-VII synthétise sLex et CLA, mais pas Lex et VIM-2. Lex et VIM-2 sont générés par la FucT-IV. La FucT-IX ne participe qu'à la synthèse de Lex, sa capacité de synthèse de VIM-2 dans les cellules CHO est très faible. Le rôle de la FucT-IX dans la régulation du roulement cellulaire dépendant des sélectines a été testé dans des conditions de flux. Les vitesses de roulement des cellules CHO co-exprimant la FucT-LX, la core-2 01,6-N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase et PSGL-1 sont très élevées sur la P-sélectine (médiane : 497.95 µm/s, n=96) alors qu'elles sont beaucoup plus lentes sur la E-sélectine (médiane 7 µm/s, n=64). Les recrutements sur la E-sélectine des cellules CHO-C2F9PSGL¬1 et des CHO-C2F7PSGL-1 sont similaires (moyenne ± SEM : 127.44 ± 4.38 vs. 151.16 ± 3.16 cellules/min/mm2, n=5). Celui des cellules CHO-C2F4PSGL-1 est par contre plus faible (54.20 ± 2.13 cellules/min/mm2, n=5). Ces résultats indiquent que la FucT-IX est impliquée dans la biosynthèse de Lex, VIM-2 et CLA et qu'elle régule l'interaction des cellules CHO avec la E-sélectine. Contrairement aux FucT-IV et -VII, la FucT-IX ne joue qu'un rôle mineur dans la régulation du roulement cellulaire sur la L- et la P-sélectine. L'expression fréquente de la FucT-IX par les myéloblastes suggère qu'elle pourrait participer avec les FucT-IV et -VII à la régulation de la migration cellulaire dépendant de la E-sélectine. Finalement, ce travail de thèse a été étendu à l'identification des protéines cytoplasmiques qui interagissent avec le domaine cytoplasmique de PSGL-1 et qui pourraient être impliquées dans la transmission de signaux intracellulaires. Les ligands intracellulaires de PSGL-1 seront identifiés par la technique du double hybride qui nous a déjà permis de confirmer que syk et la N-moésine se lient au domaine cytoplasmique de PSGL-1. Des ligands supplémentaires seront identifiés employant une librairie provenant des cellules souches hématopoïétiques comme proie. ABSTRACT Blast cell dissemination is a major complication of acute myeloblastic (AML) and lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Blast cell migration is dependent on mechanisms that are similar to those which regulate leukocyte migration into inflammatory lesions. Among them, fticosylated oligosaccharides that decorate selectin ligands play a key role by interacting with selectins. PSGL-1 (P-Selectin Glycoprotein Ligand-1) is a 240 kD glycoprotein constitutively expressed on leucocytes and which supports leukocyte rolling on selectins. PSGL-1 interaction with selectins is dependent on post-translational modifications such as sialylation, sulfation, N- and 0-glycosylation. Among the involved enzymes, the α1,3-fucosyltransferases (FucT) play a major role in generating cell surface glycoconjugates carrying fucosylated oligosaccharides which interact with selectins (sLex, Lex, VIM-2, CLA). Since no information is available on the expression of α1,3-fucosyltransferases by leukemic blast cells, we examined it in 120 cases of acute leukemia. FucT-IV and -VII mRNAs were detected, by RT-PCR, in all tested cases. In contrast, the presence of FucT-IX mRNA was shown in only 40% of patients with acute leukemia (48/120). FucT-IX mRNA was detected in 65% of AML (47/72) and, less frequently, in 26% of ALL (11/42). Importantly, all ALL cases expressing FucT-IX were either secondary leukemia resulting from the transformation of chronic myelocytic leukemia in acute lymphoblastic leukemia or mature B-ALL (FAB L3 subtype or Burkitt lymphoma/leukemia according to WHO classification). FucT-IX was not detected in precursor B or T-ALL. The expression of PSGL-1 and fucosylated epitopes was significantly different among AML and ALL, Lex, VIM-2 and sLex being more frequently expressed by myeloblasts than by lymphoblasts. The role of FucT-IV, -VII and -IX in the biosynthesis of Lex, VIM-2, CLA and sLex was examined by expressing the cDNA of each α1,3-FucT in CHO cells. Immunophenotypic analysis of CHO transfectants indicated that FucT-VII synthesizes sLex and CLA but not Lex or VIM-2. Lex and CLA were generated by both FucT-IV and -IX. FucT-IV and FucT-IX differed in their ability to synthesize VIM-2, FucT-IX being less efficient than FucT-IV. The role of FucT-IX in regulating selectin-dependent rolling was assessed under hydrodynamic flow conditions. P-selectin-dependent interactions were transient and occurred at high velocities (median: 497.95 1,µm/s, n=96). In contrast, much slower rolling velocities were observed on E-selectin (median: 7 µm/s, n=64). The recruitment of CHO-C2F9PSGL-1 and CHO-C2F7PSGL-1 cells was similar on E-selectin (mean ± SEM: 127.44 ± 4.38, n=5 vs 151.16 ± 3.16 cells/min/mm2, n=5). In the other hand, CHO-C2F4PSGL-1 cells were less efficiently recruited on E-selectin (54.20 ± 2.13 cells/min/mm2, n=5). This results indicate that FucT-IX is involved in the biosynthesis of Lex, VIM-2 and CLA and that it confers E-selectin binding activity to CHO cells. By contrast to FucT-IV and -VII, FucT-IX had a minor role in regulating P- and L-selectin-dependent rolling on CHO transfectants. The frequent expression of FucT-IX in myeloblasts suggests that it may participate with FucT-IV and -VII in regulating E-selectin-dependent cell migration into tissues. Finally, this thesis work was extended to the identification of the cytoplasmic proteins interacting with cytoplasmic domain of PSGL-1 that may be involved in transducing intracellular signals. We planned to identify these intracellular ligands of PSGL-1 by using the double hybrid technique and already confirmed that syk and N-moesin bind to the cytoplasmic domain of PSGL-1. Additional PSGL-1 ligands will be sought by the same technique using a CD34+ stem cell library as pray. RESUME DESTINE A UN LARGE PUBLIC : L'adhésion et la migration leucocytaire sont nécessaires à de nombreux processus cellulaires comme la régulation de l'hématopoïèse, mais aussi dans la pathogenèse de l'artériosclérose, des maladies inflammatoires et de la métastatisation des cellules cancéreuses. Les molécules impliquées constituent depuis peu des cibles pour la thérapie du cancer. La migration leucocytaire vers un site d'inflammation dépend de mécanismes complexes, se déroulant en plusieurs étapes, nécessitant l'interaction séquentielle de molécules d'adhésion leucocytaires et endothéliales. Ainsi, chronologiquement, suite à un stimulus inflammatoire, les leucocytes « roulent » sur les cellules endothéliales, sont activées, s'arrêtent et traversent la paroi endothéliale (diapédèse) pour migrer dans les tissus environnants inflammés selon un gradient chimiotactique. La première étape de roulement met en jeu deux molécules principales : PSGL-1 (P-Sélectine Glycoprotéine Ligand-1) du coté des leucocytes et les sélectines du coté de l'endothélium de la paroi vasculaire. L'interaction entre ces deux molécules nécessite des décorations de ces protéines par des sucres, des résidus sulfates et des acides sialiques. Le sucre essentiel à la liaison demeure le fucose qui est attaché aux protéines grâce à des enzymes de la famille des fucosyltransferases. Actuellement, neuf fucosyltransférases humaines ont été identifiées et désignées sous FucT-I à IX. La FucT-IX, dernière fucosyltransférase clonée, a un faible degré d'homologie avec les autres fucosyltransférases mais sa séquence est extrêmement conservée entre les espèces. Ceci traduit son importance par une forte résistance à la pression évolutive. L'examen de son expression au sein de 120 cas de leucémies aiguës a mis en évidence son comportement atypique. En effet, alors que les autres FucTs sont toujours présentes, la FucT¬IX ne s'exprime que dans un cas sur deux en moyenne avec une préférence plus importante pour les leucémies myéloïdes. Ainsi, une étude plus approfondie de cet enzyme à mis en évidence sa capacité à induire une interaction cellulaire plus spécifique de la E-sélectine. Elle décore non seulement des protéines de surface, mais aussi certainement les glycolipides constituant la membrane cellulaire.
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Captopril, or SQ 14,225 an orally active inhibitor of angiotensin-converting enzyme, produced a significant blood pressure reduction in 26 hypertensives. This new drug, alone or combined with a diuretic, has normalized the blood pressure of the 22 patients on long-term treatment.
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The malic enzyme (ME) gene is a target for both thyroid hormone receptors and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPAR). Within the ME promoter, two direct repeat (DR)-1-like elements, MEp and MEd, have been identified as putative PPAR response elements (PPRE). We demonstrate that only MEp and not MEd is able to bind PPAR/retinoid X receptor (RXR) heterodimers and mediate peroxisome proliferator signaling. Taking advantage of the close sequence resemblance of MEp and MEd, we have identified crucial determinants of a PPRE. Using reciprocal mutation analyses of these two elements, we show the preference for adenine as the spacing nucleotide between the two half-sites of the PPRE and demonstrate the importance of the two first bases flanking the core DR1 in 5'. This latter feature of the PPRE lead us to consider the polarity of the PPAR/RXR heterodimer bound to its cognate element. We demonstrate that, in contrast to the polarity of RXR/TR and RXR/RAR bound to DR4 and DR5 elements respectively, PPAR binds to the 5' extended half-site of the response element, while RXR occupies the 3' half-site. Consistent with this polarity is our finding that formation and binding of the PPAR/RXR heterodimer requires an intact hinge T region in RXR while its integrity is not required for binding of the RXR/TR heterodimer to a DR4.
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BACKGROUND: Visceral leishmaniasis is a parasitic disease associated with high mortality. The most important foci of visceral leishmaniasis in Ethiopia are in the Northwest and are predominantly associated with high rates of HIV co-infection. Co-infection of visceral leishmaniasis patients with HIV results in higher mortality, treatment failure and relapse. We have previously shown that arginase, an enzyme associated with immunosuppression, was increased in patients with visceral leishmaniasis and in HIV seropositive patients; further our results showed that high arginase activity is a marker of disease severity. Here, we tested the hypothesis that increased arginase activities associated with visceral leishmaniasis and HIV infections synergize in patients co-infected with both pathogens. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We recruited a cohort of patients with visceral leishmaniasis and a cohort of patients with visceral leishmaniasis and HIV infection from Gondar, Northwest Ethiopia, and recorded and compared their clinical data. Further, we measured the levels of arginase activity in the blood of these patients and identified the phenotype of arginase-expressing cells. Our results show that CD4(+) T cell counts were significantly lower and the parasite load in the spleen was significantly higher in co-infected patients. Moreover, our results demonstrate that arginase activity was significantly higher in peripheral blood mononuclear cells and plasma of co-infected patients. Finally, we identified the cells-expressing arginase in the PBMCs as low-density granulocytes. CONCLUSION: Our results suggest that increased arginase might contribute to the poor disease outcome characteristic of patients with visceral leishmaniasis and HIV co-infection.
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Résumé Les oxylipines, telles que l'acide jasmonique (AJ ou jasmonate), jouent un rôle central en réponse à la blessure et à la pathogenèse. De nombreuses études ont montré l'importance de la voie canonique du jasmonate lors de la défense des plantes. De plus, un précurseur cyclopentenone de l'AJ, l'acide oxo-phyto-dienoic (OPDA), a été impliqué comme jouant le rôle d'une molécule signal lors de la défense contre certains pathogènes. En utilisant des mutants bloqués dans la biosynthèse de l'acide jasmonique (aos) ou dans sa perception (coi1-1), nous avons cherché à définir dans quelle mesure l'OPDA joue un rôle de signal induisant l'expression génétique en réponse à la blessure chez Arabidopsis. A l'aide de puces à ADN (microarray), nous avons montré que les transcriptomes d'aos et de coi1-1 sont très semblables après blessure, ce qui suggère que les produits d'AOS sont tous perçus via COI1. Pourtant, lorsqu'on analyse les métabolites présents chez ces mutants, une différence est visible, puisque aos n'accumule pas d'AJ, alors que coi1-1 en accumule encore rapidement après blessure. Nous avons étudié la possibilité qu'un mécanisme de régulation post-traductionnelle sur la voie de biosynthèse du jasmonate explique l'accumulation d'AJ chez coi1-1 après blessure. La lipoxygenase 2 (LOX2) est la première enzyme impliquée dans la biosynthèse de l'AJ et est donc une cible potentielle d'un tel mécanisme. Un indice sur la manière dont l'activité LOX pourrait être régulée vient du mutant fou2 (pour fatty acid oxygenation upregcilated 2) dans lequel l'activité LOX ainsi que le niveau d'AJ sont constitutivement élevés. Cette mutation implique un flux de cation dans la régulation de la production de l'AJ. De plus, il a été montré que plusieurs LOXs, dans des organismes autres que des plantes, peuvent lier le calcium. Nous montrons que l'activité LOX requiert l'addition de cations divalents pour être maximale in vitro, et que non seulement le calcium mais aussi le magnésium joue ce rôle. De plus, nous caractérisons un mutant récessif de LOX2 chez Arabidopsis (lox2-1). Ces plantes sont fertiles, et une analyse quantitative montre qu'elles accumulent toujours un peu d'AJ après blessure. Ceci suggère que LOX2 n'est pas la seule LOX impliquée dans la synthèse d'AJ. Aussi les plantes lox2-1 ne sont pas plus sensibles que les plantes de type sauvage lorsqu'elles sont infectées par la moisissure Botrytis cinerea ou lorsqu'elles sont exposées à un détritivore, néanmoins elles sont plus sensibles lorsqu'elles sont offertes en nourriture à un insecte herbivore. Les insectes et les plantes ont co-évolué conjointement, ainsi une plante ne contenant qu'un niveau réduit d'AJ favorise l'insecte. La disponibilité d'un mutant avec un niveau intermédiaire d'AJ va permettre de mieux comprendre pourquoi les plantes produisent autant de jasmonate. Abstract Oxylipins such as jasmonic acid (JA) play central roles in the wound response and during pathogenesis and many studies have confirmed the important role of the canonical jasmonate pathway in plant defense. Moreover, the cyclopentenone precursor of JA, oxo-phytodienoic acid (OPDA), is also thought to function as a signaling molecule in defense towards some pathogens. Its action was reported to depend on a different signal pathway to JA. By using mutants blocked in the biosynthesis (aos) or perception (coil-1) of JA, we investigated to which extend OPDA works as signaling molecule to trigger gene expression in the wound response of Arabidopsis. Using microarrays, we showed that aos and coil-1 transcriptome are similar in response to wounding, suggesting that products of AOS are all perceived by COI1. However, we found a difference between the two mutants at the metobolomic level, since aos is devoid of JA, but coil-1 can still rapidly accumulate JA upon wounding. We investigated the possibility that the post-translational activation of JA biosynthesis could explain the fast accumulation of JA in coil-1 plants upon wounding. Lipoxygenase (LOX) 2 is the first enzyme implicated in JA synthesis and was thus chosen as a potential target for posttranslational regulation. A clue as to how LOX activity might be regulated came from the fatty acid oxygenation upregulated 2 (foul) mutant in which LOX activity and JA levels are elevated. The foul mutant implicates cations flux in the regulation of JA production, and several LOXs in organisms other than plants have been shown to bind calcium. We showed that Arabidopsis LOX requires divalent cations for full activity in vitro, and that not only calcium but also magnesium can play this role. Moreover, a single recessive mutant of AtLOX2 was characterized. These plants are fully fertile. Quantitative oxylipin analysis showed that lox2-1 can still accumulate some JA after wounding, which suggests that LOX2 is not the only LOX involved in JA biosynthesis. lox2-1 plants do not show altered susceptibility to the fungus Botrytis cinerea or to a detritivore, however, they are more susceptible to an insect herbivore. The insect and plants are closely co-evolved and a reduced ability to synthesize JA favors the insect. The availability of a lox2-1 mutant with intermediate JA levels will further help understanding why plants produce elevated JA levels.
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We investigated possible relations among four common neonatal manifestations of diabetic pregnancy (macrosomia, hypoglycemia, hypocalcemia, jaundice) and four enzyme polymorphisms (PGM1, ADA, AK1, ACP1 in a sample of infants born of diabetic mothers. The pattern of associations observed between the two sets of variables is consistent with known differences in enzymatic activity within phenotypes of each system, suggesting that low enzymatic activity may have unfavorable effects on fetal development and on adaptability of the neonate to the extrauterine environment, Some of the polymorphic enzymes studied influence fetal growth in normal pregnancy as well. Analysis of relations between genetic polymorphisms and the clinical pattern of common diseases may provide a better understanding of the genetic basis of the clinical variability of diseases within and between human populations.
Resumo:
Microtubule-associated protein 1B, MAP1B, is a major cytoskeletal protein during brain development and one of the largest brain MAPs associated with microtubules and microfilaments. Here, we identified several proteins that bind to MAP1B via immunoprecipitation with a MAP1B-specific antibody, by one and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and subsequent mass spectrometry identification of precipitated proteins. In addition to tubulin and actin, a variety of proteins were identified. Among these proteins were glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), heat shock protein 8, dihydropyrimidinase related proteins 2 and 3, protein-L-isoaspartate O-methyltransferase, beta-spectrin, and clathrin protein MKIAA0034, linking either directly or indirectly to MAP1B. In particular, GAPDH, a key glycolytic enzyme, was bound in large quantity to the heavy chain of MAP1B in adult brain tissue. In vitro binding studies confirmed a direct binding of GAPDH to MAP1B. In PC12 cells, GAPDH was found in cytoplasm and nuclei and partially co-localized with MAP1B. It disappeared from the cytoplasm under oxidative stress or after a disruption of cytoskeletal elements after colcemid or cytochalasin exposure. GAPDH may be essential in the local energy provision of cytoskeletal structures and MAP1B may help to keep this key enzyme close to the cytoskeleton.
Resumo:
Chemokines are small chemotactic molecules widely expressed throughout the central nervous system. A number of papers, during the past few years, have suggested that they have physiological functions in addition to their roles in neuroinflammatory diseases. In this context, the best evidence concerns the CXC-chemokine stromal cell-derived factor (SDF-1alpha or CXCL12) and its receptor CXCR4, whose signalling cascade is also implicated in the glutamate release process from astrocytes. Recently, astrocytic synaptic like microvesicles (SLMVs) that express vesicular glutamate transporters (VGLUTs) and are able to release glutamate by Ca(2+)-dependent regulated exocytosis, have been described both in tissue and in cultured astrocytes. Here, in order to elucidate whether SDF-1alpha/CXCR4 system can participate to the brain fast communication systems, we investigated whether the activation of CXCR4 receptor triggers glutamate exocytosis in astrocytes. By using total internal reflection (TIRF) microscopy and the membrane-fluorescent styryl dye FM4-64, we adapted an imaging methodology recently developed to measure exocytosis and recycling in synaptic terminals, and monitored the CXCR4-mediated exocytosis of SLMVs in astrocytes. We analyzed the co-localization of VGLUT with the FM dye at single-vesicle level, and observed the kinetics of the FM dye release during single fusion events. We found that the activation of CXCR4 receptors triggered a burst of exocytosis on a millisecond time scale that involved the release of Ca(2+) from internal stores. These results support the idea that astrocytes can respond to external stimuli and communicate with the neighboring cells via fast release of glutamate.
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Neuronal subpopulations of dorsal root ganglion (DRG) cells in the chicken exhibit carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity. To determine whether CA activity is expressed by DRG cells maintained in in vitro cultures, dissociated DRG cells from 10-day-old chick embryos were cultured on a collagen substrate. The influence exerted by environmental factors on the enzyme expression was tested under various conditions of culture. Neuron-enriched cell cultures and mixed DRG-cell cultures (including numerous non-neuronal cells) were performed either in a defined medium or in a horse serum-supplemented medium. In all the tested conditions, subpopulations of cultured sensory neurons expressed CA activity in their cell bodies, while their neurites were rarely stained; in each case, the percentage of CA-positive neurons declined with the age of the cultures. The number and the persistence of neurons possessing CA activity as well as the intensity of the reaction were enhanced by addition of horse serum. In contrast, the expression of the neuronal CA activity was not affected by the presence of non-neuronal cells or by the rise of CO2 concentration. Thus, the appearance and disappearance of neuronal subpopulations expressing CA activity may be decisively influenced by factors contained in the horse serum. The loss of CA-positive neurons with time could result from a cell selection or from genetic repression. Analysis of the time curves does not support a preferential cell death of CA-positive neurons but suggests that the eventual conversion of CA-positive neurons into CA-negative neurons results from a loss of the enzyme activity. These results indicate that the phenotypic expression of cultured sensory neurons is dependent on defined environmental factors.
Resumo:
The acute renal effects of hypoxemia and the ability of the co-administration of an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor (perindoprilat) and an adenosine receptor antagonist (theophylline) to prevent these effects were assessed in anesthetized and mechanically-ventilated rabbits. Renal blood flow (RBF) and glomerular filtration rate (GFR) were determined by the clearances of para-aminohippuric acid and inulin, respectively. Each animal acted as its own control. In 8 untreated rabbits, hypoxemia induced a significant drop in mean blood pressure (-12 +/- 2%), GFR (-16 +/- 3%) and RBF (-12 +/- 3%) with a concomitant increase in renal vascular resistance (RVR) (+ 18 +/- 5%), without changes in filtration fraction (FF) (-4 +/- 2%). These results suggest the occurrence of both pre- and postglomerular vasoconstriction during the hypoxemic stress. In 7 rabbits pretreated with intravenous perindoprilat (20 microg/kg), the hypoxemia-induced changes in RBF and RVR were prevented. FF decreased significantly (-18 +/- 2%), while the drop in GFR was partially blunted. These results could be explained by the inhibition of the angiotensin-mediated efferent vasoconstriction by perindoprilat. In 7 additional rabbits, co-administration of perindoprilat and theophylline (1 mg/kg) completely prevented the hypoxemia-induced changes in RBF (+ 11 +/- 3%) and GFR (+ 2 +/- 3%), while RVR decreased significantly (-14 +/- 3%). Since adenosine and angiotensin II were both shown to participate, at least in part, in the renal changes induced by hypoxemia, the beneficial effects of perindoprilat and theophylline in this model could be mediated by complementary actions of angiotensin II and adenosine on the renal vasculature.