34 resultados para OMEGA
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La cuticule des plantes, composée de cutine, un polyester lipidique complexe et de cires cuticulaires, couvre l'épiderme de la plupart des parties aériennes des plantes. Elle est constituée d'une barrière hydrophobique primaire qui minimise les pertes en eau et en soluté et protège l'organisme de différents stress environnementaux tels que les rayons UV, la dessiccation et l'infection par des pathogènes. Elle est aussi impliquée dans la délimitation des organes durant le développement. La cutine est un polyester qui, dans la plupart des espèces végétales, est principalement composé d'acides gras ω-hydroxylés composé de 16 à 18 carbones. Cependant, la cutine des feuilles d'Arabidopsis a une composition différente et est principalement constituée d'acides dicarboxyliques à 16-18 carbones. Les cires sont présentes dans le polyester de la cutine ou le recouvrent. Chez Arabidopsis, un nombre de mutants, tel que 1er, bdg, hth, att1, wbc11, et des plantes transgéniques avec différents changement dans la structure de la cuticule dans les feuilles et la tige, ont récemment été décrits et servent d'outils pour étudier la relation entre la structure et la fonction de la cuticule.7 mutants d'Arabidopsis ont été isolés par une méthode de coloration qui permet de détecter une augmentation dans la perméabilité cuticulaire. Ces mutants ont été appelés pec pour permeable cuticle.Pour la première partie de mon projet, j'ai principalement travaillé avec pec9/bre1 (permeable cuticle 9/botrytis resistance 1). PEC9/BRE1 a été identifié comme étant LACS2 (LONG CHAIN ACYL-CoA SYNTHETASE 2). Dans ce mutant, la cuticule n'est pas visible sous microscopie électronique et la quantité en acides gras omega- hydroxylés et en leurs dérivés est fortement réduite. Ces altérations conduisent à une plus grande perméabilité de la cuticule qui est mise en évidence par une plus grande sensibilité à la sécheresse et aux xénobiotiques et une coloration plus rapide par bleu de toluidine. Le mutant Iacs2 démontre aussi une grande capacité de résistance à l'infection du champignon nécrotrophique B. cinerea. Cette résistance est due à l'extrusion sur les feuilles d'un composé antifongique durant l'infection. Ce travail a été publié dans EMBO journal (Bessire et al., 2007, EMBO Journal).Mon second projet était principalement concentré sur pec1, un autre mutant isolé par le premier crible. La caractérisation de pec1 a révélé des phénotypes similaires à ceux de Iacs2, mais à chaque fois dans des proportions moindres : sensibilité accrue à la sécheresse et aux herbicides, plus grande perméabilité au bleu de toluidine et au calcofluor white, altération de la structure cuticulaire et résistance à B. cinerea à travers la même activité antifongique. PEC1 a été identifié comme étant AtPDR4. Ce gène code pour un transporteur ABC de la famille PDR ("Pleiotropic Drugs Resistance") qui sont des transporteurs ayants un large spectre de substrats. Le mutant se différencie de Iacs2, en cela que la composition en acides gras de la cuticule n'est pas autant altérée. C'est principalement le dihydroxypalmitate des fleurs dont la quantité est réduite. L'expression du gène marqué avec une GFP sous le contrôle du promoteur endogène a permis de localiser le transporteur au niveau de la membrane plasmique des cellules de l'épiderme, de manière polaire. En effet, la protéine est principalement dirigée vers l'extérieure de la plante, là où se trouve la cuticule, suggérant une implication d'AtPDR4 dans le transport de composants de la cuticule. Ce travail est actuellement soumis à Plant Cell.Une étude phylogénétique a aussi montré qu'AtPDR4 était très proche d'OsPDR6 du riz. Le mutant du riz a d'ailleurs montré des phénotypes de nanisme et de perméabilité similaire au mutant chez Arabidopsis.AbstractThe cuticle, consisting principally of cutin and cuticular waxes, is a hydrophobic layer of lipidic nature, which covers all aerial parts of plants and protects them from different abiotic and biotic stresses. Recently, the research in this area has given us a better understanding of the structure and the formation of the cuticle. The Arabidopsis mutants permeable cuticle 1 (peel) and botrytis resistance 1 (brel) were identified in two screens to identify permeable cuticles. The screens used the fluorescent dye calcofluor to measure permeability and also resistance to the fungal pathogen Botrytis. These mutants have highly permeable cuticle characteristics such as higher water loss, intake of chemicals through the cuticle, higher resistance to Botrytis cinerea infection, and organ fusion.BRE1 was cloned and found to be LACS2, a gene previously identified which is important in the formation and biosynthetic pathway of the cuticle. In brel, the amount of the major component of cutin in Arabidopsis leaves and stems, dicarboxylic acids, is five times lower than in the wild type. Moreover, the permeability of the cuticle allows the release of antifungal compounds at the leaf surface that inhibits the growth of two necrotrophic fungi: Botrytis cinerea and Sclerotinia sclerotiorum.PEC1 was identified as AtPDR4, a gene that codes for a plasma membrane transporter of the Pleiotropic Drug Resistance family, a sub-family of the ABC- transporters. AtPDR4 is strongly expressed in the epidermis of expanding tissues. In the epidermis it is located in a polar manner on the external plasma membrane, facing the cuticle. Analysis of the monomer composition of the cutin reveals that in this mutant the amount of hydroxy-acids and dihydroxy-palmitate is 2-3 times lower in flowers, in which organ these cutin monomers are the major components. Thus AtPDR4 is thought to function as a putative cutin monomer transporter.
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Purified fractions from a fetal sheep liver extract (FSLE) were investigated, in a murine model, for induction of leukocyte stimulating activities. The fractions FSLE-1 and FSLE-2 induced splenocyte proliferation in vitro in C57Bl/10ScSn (LPS responder) mice comparable to LPS, and in C57Bl/10ScCr (LPS non responder) mice. They also stimulated the release of nitrogen radicals in bone marrow-derived macrophages (BMDM) from several mouse inbred strains including both C57Bl/10ScSn and C57Bl/10ScCr mice. Stimulation of NO production could be blocked by L-NMMA, an inhibitor of iNOS, and enhanced by the simultaneous addition of IFN-gamma. Moreover, stimulation of macrophages by FSLE-1 and FSLE-2 induced a cytostatic effect of the activated macrophages for Abelson 8-1 tumor cells. The stimulatory activity of the purified fractions is partially due to trace amounts of LPS derived from the fetal liver extract which was enriched during purification. Our results may help to explain the beneficial effect of the extract in patients which has been observed clinically.
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SUMMARY Pulmonary Pulmonary disease is the primary cause of morbidity and mortality in cystic fibrosis patients (CF). Airways of CF patients are early colonized by various bacteriae, and an intense inflammatory response participates to airways destruction. Accumulation of neutrophils releasing proteolytic enzymes and free radicals induce progressive lung tissue destruction in CF. Among several inflammatory mediators implicated in this process, chemotactic factors such as leukotriene B4 (LTB4), product of arachidonic omega-6 polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA), plays an important role. Many anti-inflammatory therapies including corticosteroids, ibuprofen, macrolides, antioxidants and antiproteinases have been proposed in CF over the last 20 years. In complement to these various approaches, dietary supplementation with polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) omega-3, known to favor the synthesis of less inflammatory leukotriene B5 (LTB5), could also represent a potential. therapy. The objective of this thesis was to assess the impact of this nutritional approach on several CF neutrophil functions. In addition, we have also examined the influence of this approach on various clinical parameters, to assess the feasibility of future studies specifically oriented towards clinical effects. To that endeavour, a high performance liquid chromatography method has been developed and validated, allowing the simultaneous determination of LTB4 and LTB5 produced by stimulated human polymorphonuclear leukocytes. This method was applied for the analysis of samples collected from CF patients taking part to a double-blind, randomized, crossover placebo-controlled clinical trial aiming at evaluating in these patients the immunomodulatary effect of a liquid supplementation enriched in omega-3 PUFA in CF. This study has shown that omega-3 PUFA are incorporated in CF neutrophil membranes and results into a modulation of leucotrienes B production, as testified by a three fold decrease in LTB4/LTB5 ratio after omega-3 PUFA supplementation. However, no clinical improvement was observed upon omega-3 supplementation, very reproducible results observed allow to be optimistic for a future larger trial focused on clinical outcomes. In conclusion, even if the results show that omega-3 PUFA are absorbed by CF patients and that the subsequent decrease in LTB4/LTB5 ratio suggests that in such conditions, neutrophils may produce less pro-inflammatory mediators, the clinical relevance of those observations remains to be demonstrated. Future multicentric studies focusing on clinical endpoints are still warranted to determine the importance of omega-3 PUFA in CF therapeutics. RÉSUMÉ Les patients atteints de mucoviscidose (patients CF) souffrent d'infections pulmonaires récurrentes. Celles-ci provoquent un afflux permanent de neutrophiles dans le poumon, neutrophiles qui libèrent des enzymes protéolytiques et des radicaux libres responsables à long terme de la destruction du tissu pulmonaire et, finalement, de l'insuffisance respiratoire, première cause de morbidité et de mortalité chez ces patients. La réponse inflammatoire ainsi induite peut être réduite par divers traitements anti-inflammatoires, tels que corticoïdes, anti-inflammatoires non stéroïdiens ou azithromycine. L'apport oral en acides gras polyinsaturés (AGPI) oméga-3 pourrait être une autre approche thérapeutique intéressante. Ces nutriments sont décrits comme possédant des propriétés anti-inflammatoires notamment en favorisant la synthèse d'eicosanoïdes pourvus d'une activité inflammatoire moindre par rapport à ceux issus d'une autre famille d'AGPI, les oméga-6. Ce travail de thèse a pour objectif premier d'évaluer l'impact de cette approche nutritionnelle sur diverses fonctions du neutrophile chez des patients CF. Cependant un intérêt de nature prospective a également été porté à certains paramètres cliniques, afin d'évaluer la faisabilité d'une future étude axée sur des effets cliniques. Pour ce faire, une méthode de chromatographie liquide à haute performance couplée à un spectromètre de masse a été développée et validée. Cette analyse devait permettre le dosage simultané de deux eicosanoïdes, le leucotriène B4 (LTB4) issu des AGPI oméga-6 et le leucotriène B5 (LTB5) issu des AGPI oméga-3. Puis, une étude clinique, double aveugle, randomisée, croisée sans période de washout, mais contrôlée avec un placebo, a été mise au point pour évaluer l'effet immunomodulateur de ces AGPI oméga-3 donnés sous la forme d'un liquide nutritif chez des patients CF. Les résultats de cette étude ont permis de démontrer l'absorption intestinale des AGPI oméga-3 par les patients. De plus, leur administration a permis de modifier la production de teucotriène B. En effet, le ratio LTB4/LTB5 a été diminué de près de trois fois sous liquide nutritif enrichi en AGPI oméga-3. Enfin aucune différence n'a pu être notée pour les paramètres cliniques; toutefois les résultats reproductibles observés permettent d'envisager qu'une future étude multicentrique axée sur des effets cliniques est faisable. En conclusion, la modification de la composition en AGPI membranaires du neutrophile observée durant cette étude laisse penser que ces nutriments sont absorbés par les patients CF. La modulation de la production en LTBs qui en découle permet d'envisager un potentiel effet anti-inflammatoire. Toutefois, la relevance clinique de ces observations restent à être démontrée. A l'heure actuelle, une étude multicentrique, focalisée sur des paramètres cliniques, est nécessaire avant de pouvoir se prononcer sur l'utilisation des AGPI oméga-3 chez les patients CF.
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Thumb hypoplasia treatment requires considering every component of the maldevelopment. Types II and IIIA hypoplasia share common features such as first web space narrowing, hypoplasia or absence of thenar muscles and metacarpophalangeal joint instability. Many surgical techniques to correct the malformation have been described. We report our surgical strategy that includes modifications of the usual technique that we found useful in reducing morbidity while optimizing the results. A diamond-shape kite flap was used to widen the first web space. Its design allowed primary closure of the donor site using a Dufourmentel flap. The ring finger flexor digitorum superficialis was transferred for opposition transfer, and the same tendon was used to stabilize the metacarpophalangeal joint on its ulnar and/or radial side depending on a uniplanar or more global instability. An omega-shaped K-wire was placed between the first and second metacarpals to maintain a wide opening of the first web space without stressing the reconstructed ulnar collateral ligament of the MCP joint. We report a clinical series of 15 patients (18 thumbs) who had this reconstructive program.
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Cutinized and suberized cell walls form physiological important plant-environment interfaces as they act as barriers limiting water and nutrient loss and protect from radiation and invasion by pathogens. Due to the lack of protocols for the isolation and analysis of cutin and suberin in Arabidopsis, the model plant for molecular biology, mutants and transgenic plants with a defined altered cutin or suberin composition are unavailable, causing that structure and function of these apoplastic barriers are still poorly understood. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) revealed that Arabidopsis leaf cuticle thickness ranges from only 22 nm in leaf blades to 45 nm on petioles, causing the difficulty in cuticular membrane isolation. We report the use of polysaccharide hydrolases to isolate Arabidopsis cuticular membranes, suitable for depolymerization and subsequent compositional analysis. Although cutin characteristic omega-hydroxy acids (7%) and mid-chain hydroxylated fatty acids (8%) were detected, the discovery of alpha,omega-diacids (40%) and 2-hydroxy acids (14%) as major depolymerization products reveals a so far novel monomer composition in Arabidopsis cutin, but with chemical analogy to root suberin. Histochemical and TEM analysis revealed that suberin depositions were localized to the cell walls in the endodermis of primary roots and the periderm of mature roots of Arabidopsis. Enzyme digested and solvent extracted root cell walls when subjected to suberin depolymerization conditions released omega-hydroxy acids (43%) and alpha,omega-diacids (24%) as major components together with carboxylic acids (9%), alcohols (6%) and 2-hydroxyacids (0.1%). This similarity to suberin of other species indicates that Arabidopsis roots can serve as a model for suberized tissue in general.
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We elucidated the mechanisms of action of two n-3 PUFAs, eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), in Jurkat T-cells. Both DHA and EPA were principally incorporated into phospholipids in the following order: phosphatidylcholine < phosphatidylethanolamine < phosphatidylinositol/phosphatidylserine. Furthermore, two isoforms of phospholipase A(2) (i.e., calcium-dependent and calcium-independent) were implicated in the release of DHA and EPA, respectively, during activation of these cells. The two fatty acids inhibited the phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA)-induced plasma membrane translocation of protein kinase C (PKC)-alpha and -epsilon. The two n-3 PUFAs also inhibited the nuclear translocation of nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB) and the transcription of the interleukin-2 (IL-2) gene in PMA-activated Jurkat T-cells. Together, these results demonstrate that DHA and EPA, being released by two isoforms of phospholipase A(2), modulate IL-2 gene expression by exerting their action on two PKC isoforms and NF-kappaB in Jurkat T-cells.
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BACKGROUND: The use of n-3 fatty acids may prevent cardiovascular events in patients with recent myocardial infarction or heart failure. Their effects in patients with (or at risk for) type 2 diabetes mellitus are unknown. METHODS: In this double-blind study with a 2-by-2 factorial design, we randomly assigned 12,536 patients who were at high risk for cardiovascular events and had impaired fasting glucose, impaired glucose tolerance, or diabetes to receive a 1-g capsule containing at least 900 mg (90% or more) of ethyl esters of n-3 fatty acids or placebo daily and to receive either insulin glargine or standard care. The primary outcome was death from cardiovascular causes. The results of the comparison between n-3 fatty acids and placebo are reported here. RESULTS: During a median follow up of 6.2 years, the incidence of the primary outcome was not significantly decreased among patients receiving n-3 fatty acids, as compared with those receiving placebo (574 patients [9.1%] vs. 581 patients [9.3%]; hazard ratio, 0.98; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.87 to 1.10; P=0.72). The use of n-3 fatty acids also had no significant effect on the rates of major vascular events (1034 patients [16.5%] vs. 1017 patients [16.3%]; hazard ratio, 1.01; 95% CI, 0.93 to 1.10; P=0.81), death from any cause (951 [15.1%] vs. 964 [15.4%]; hazard ratio, 0.98; 95% CI, 0.89 to 1.07; P=0.63), or death from arrhythmia (288 [4.6%] vs. 259 [4.1%]; hazard ratio, 1.10; 95% CI, 0.93 to 1.30; P=0.26). Triglyceride levels were reduced by 14.5 mg per deciliter (0.16 mmol per liter) more among patients receiving n-3 fatty acids than among those receiving placebo (P<0.001), without a significant effect on other lipids. Adverse effects were similar in the two groups. CONCLUSIONS: Daily supplementation with 1 g of n-3 fatty acids did not reduce the rate of cardiovascular events in patients at high risk for cardiovascular events. (Funded by Sanofi; ORIGIN ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00069784.).
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Peroxynitrite induced in vitro a dose dependent toxicity on retinal pigmented epithelial (RPE) cells. Cell death was partially mediated by apoptosis as demonstrated by nuclear fragmentation and TdT-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling assay. Peroxynitrite-induced tyrosine nitration was revealed by immunocytochemistry, both in the cytoplasm and in the nucleus of the cells. Nitration was not observed in RPE cells, producing nitric oxide (NO) after stimulation by lipopolysacharide and interferon-g (IFN-gamma), suggesting that peroxynitrite was not formed in vitro in such conditions. Peroxynitrite could be responsible for the retinal damages observed in pathological conditions in which NO has been demonstrated to be involved. In this context, EGb761, identified as a free radical scavenger, was showed herein to protect RPE cells against peroxynitrite injury.
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BACKGROUND & AIM: Immune-modulating nutritional formula containing arginine, omega-3 fatty acids and nucleotides has been demonstrated to decrease complications and length of stay in surgical patients. This study aims at assessing the impact of immune-modulating formula on hospital costs in gastrointestinal cancer surgical patients in Switzerland. METHOD: Based on a previously published meta-analysis, the relative risks of overall and infectious complications with immune-modulating versus standard nutrition formula were computed. Swiss hospital costs of patients undergoing gastrointestinal cancer surgery were retrieved. A method was developed to compute the patients' severity level, not taking into account the complications from the surgery. Incremental costs of complications were computed for both treatment groups, and sensitivity analyses were carried out. RESULTS: Relative risk of complications with pre-, peri- and post-operative use of immune-modulating formula was 0.69 (95%CI 0.58-0.83), 0.62 (95%CI 0.53-0.73) and 0.73 (95%CI 0.35-0.96) respectively. The estimated average contribution of complications to the cost of stay was CHF 14,949 (euro10,901) per patient (95%CI 10,712-19,186), independently of case's severity. Based on this cost, immune-modulating nutritional support decreased costs of hospital stay by CHF 1638 to CHF 2488 per patient (euro1195-euro1814). Net hospital savings were present for baseline complications rates as low as 5%. CONCLUSION: Immune-modulating nutritional solution is a cost-saving intervention in gastrointestinal cancer patients. The additional cost of immune-modulating formula are more than offset by savings associated with decreased treatment of complications.
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ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: Long-chain n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (LC n-3 PUFA) of marine origin exert multiple beneficial effects on health. Our previous study in mice showed that reduction of adiposity by LC n-3 PUFA was associated with both, a shift in adipose tissue metabolism and a decrease in tissue cellularity. The aim of this study was to further characterize the effects of LC n-3 PUFA on fat cell proliferation and differentiation in obese mice. METHODS: A model of inducible and reversible lipoatrophy (aP2-Cre-ERT2 PPARgammaL2/L2 mice) was used, in which the death of mature adipocytes could be achieved by a selective ablation of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma in response to i.p. injection of tamoxifen. Before the injection, obesity was induced in male mice by 8-week-feeding a corn oil-based high-fat diet (cHF) and, subsequently, mice were randomly assigned (day 0) to one of the following groups: (i) mice injected by corn-oil-vehicle only, i.e."control" mice, and fed cHF; (ii) mice injected by tamoxifen in corn oil, i.e. "mutant" mice, fed cHF; (iii) control mice fed cHF diet with 15% of dietary lipids replaced by LC n-3 PUFA concentrate (cHF+F); and (iv) mutant mice fed cHF+F. Blood and tissue samples were collected at days 14 and 42. RESULTS: Mutant mice achieved a maximum weight loss within 10 days post-injection, followed by a compensatory body weight gain, which was significantly faster in the cHF as compared with the cHF+F mutant mice. Also in control mice, body weight gain was depressed in response to dietary LC n-3 PUFA. At day 42, body weights in all groups stabilized, with no significant differences in adipocyte size between the groups, although body weight and adiposity was lower in the cHF+F as compared with the cHF mice, with a stronger effect in the mutant than in control mice. Gene expression analysis documented depression of adipocyte maturation during the reconstitution of adipose tissue in the cHF+F mutant mice. CONCLUSION: Dietary LC n-3 PUFA could reduce both hypertrophy and hyperplasia of fat cells in vivo. Results are in agreement with the involvement of fat cell turnover in control of adiposity.
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Diets rich in omega-3s have been thought to prevent both obesity and osteoporosis. However, conflicting findings are reported, probably as a result of gene by nutritional interactions. Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma (PPARγ) is a nuclear receptor that improves insulin sensitivity but causes weight gain and bone loss. Fish oil is a natural agonist for PPARγ and thus may exert its actions through the PPARγ pathway. We examined the role of PPARγ in body composition changes induced by a fish or safflower oil diet using two strains of C57BL/6J (B6); i.e. B6.C3H-6T (6T) congenic mice created by backcrossing a small locus on Chr 6 from C3H carrying 'gain of function' polymorphisms in the Pparγ gene onto a B6 background, and C57BL/6J mice. After 9months of feeding both diets to female mice, body weight, percent fat and leptin levels were less in mice fed the fish oil vs those fed safflower oil, independent of genotype. At the skeletal level, fish oil preserved vertebral bone mineral density (BMD) and microstructure in B6 but not in 6T mice. Moreover, fish oil consumption was associated with an increase in bone marrow adiposity and a decrease in BMD, cortical thickness, ultimate force and plastic energy in femur of the 6T but not the B6 mice. These effects paralleled an increase in adipogenic inflammatory and resorption markers in 6T but not B6. Thus, compared to safflower oil, fish oil (high ratio omega-3/-6) prevents weight gain, bone loss, and changes in trabecular microarchitecture in the spine with age. These beneficial effects are absent in mice with polymorphisms in the Pparγ gene (6T), supporting the tenet that the actions of n-3 fatty acids on bone microstructure are likely to be genotype dependent. Thus caution must be used in interpreting dietary intervention trials with skeletal endpoints in mice and in humans.
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End-stage renal disease patients have endothelial dysfunction and high plasma levels of ADMA (asymmetric omega-NG,NG-dimethylarginine), an endogenous inhibitor of NOS (NO synthase). The actual link between these abnormalities is controversial. Therefore, in the present study, we investigated whether HD (haemodialysis) has an acute impact on NO-dependent vasodilation and plasma ADMA in these patients. A total of 24 patients undergoing maintenance HD (HD group) and 24 age- and gender-matched healthy controls (Control group) were enrolled. The increase in forearm SkBF (skin blood flow) caused by local heating to 41 degrees C (SkBF41), known to depend on endothelial NO production, was determined with laser Doppler imaging. SkBF41 was expressed as a percentage of the vasodilatory reserve obtained from the maximal SkBF induced by local heating to 43 degrees C (independent of NO). In HD patients, SkBF41 was assessed on two successive HD sessions, once immediately before and once immediately after HD. Plasma ADMA was assayed simultaneously with MS/MS (tandem MS). In the Control group, SkBF41 was determined twice, on two different days, and plasma ADMA was assayed once. In HD patients, SkBF41 was identical before (82.2+/-13.1%) and after (82.7+/-12.4%) HD, but was lower than in controls (day 1, 89.6+/-6.1; day 2, 89.2+/-6.9%; P<0.01 compared with the HD group). In contrast, plasma ADMA was higher before (0.98+/-0.17 micromol/l) than after (0.58+/-0.10 micromol/l; P<0.01) HD. ADMA levels after HD did not differ from those obtained in controls (0.56+/-0.11 micromol/l). These findings show that HD patients have impaired NO-dependent vasodilation in forearm skin, an abnormality not acutely reversed by HD and not explained by ADMA accumulation.
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Positive selection is widely estimated from protein coding sequence alignments by the nonsynonymous-to-synonymous ratio omega. Increasingly elaborate codon models are used in a likelihood framework for this estimation. Although there is widespread concern about the robustness of the estimation of the omega ratio, more efforts are needed to estimate this robustness, especially in the context of complex models. Here, we focused on the branch-site codon model. We investigated its robustness on a large set of simulated data. First, we investigated the impact of sequence divergence. We found evidence of underestimation of the synonymous substitution rate for values as small as 0.5, with a slight increase in false positives for the branch-site test. When dS increases further, underestimation of dS is worse, but false positives decrease. Interestingly, the detection of true positives follows a similar distribution, with a maximum for intermediary values of dS. Thus, high dS is more of a concern for a loss of power (false negatives) than for false positives of the test. Second, we investigated the impact of GC content. We showed that there is no significant difference of false positives between high GC (up to similar to 80%) and low GC (similar to 30%) genes. Moreover, neither shifts of GC content on a specific branch nor major shifts in GC along the gene sequence generate many false positives. Our results confirm that the branch-site is a very conservative test.
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The high-affinity siderophore salicylate is an intermediate in the biosynthetic pathway of pyochelin, another siderophore and chelator of transition metal ions, in Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The 2.5-kb region upstream of the salicylate biosynthetic genes pchBA was sequenced and found to contain two additional, contiguous genes, pchD and pchC, having the same orientation. The deduced amino acid sequence of the 60-kDa PchD protein was similar to those of the EntE protein (2,3-dihydroxybenzoate-AMP ligase) of Escherichia coli and other adenylate-forming enzymes, suggesting that salicylate might be adenylated at the carboxyl group by PchD. The 28-kDa PchC protein showed similarities to thioesterases of prokaryotic and eukaryotic origin and might participate in the release of the product(s) formed from activated salicylate. One potential product, dihydroaeruginoate (Dha), was identified in culture supernatants of iron-limited P. aeruginosa cells. The antifungal antibiotic Dha is thought to arise from the reaction of salicylate with cysteine, followed by cyclization of cysteine. Inactivation of the chromosomal pchD gene by insertion of the transcription and translation stop element omega Sm/Sp abolished the production of Dha and pyochelin, implying that PchD-mediated activation of salicylate may be a common first step in the synthesis of both metabolites. Furthermore, the pchD::omega Sm/Sp mutation had a strong polar effect on the expression of the pchBA genes, i.e., on salicylate synthesis, indicating that the pchDCBA genes constitute a transcriptional unit. A full-length pchDCBA transcript of ca. 4.4 kb could be detected in iron-deprived, growing cells of P. aeruginosa. Transcription of pchD started at tandemly arranged promoters, which overlapped with two Fur boxes (binding sites for the ferric uptake regulator) and the promoter of the divergently transcribed pchR gene encoding an activator of pyochelin biosynthesis. This promoter arrangement allows tight iron-mediated repression of the pchDCBA operon.