66 resultados para morphological and molecular characters


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OBJECTIVES: The objective of this study is to describe the prenatal sonographic features and the results of DNA analysis on three fetuses with dyssegmental dysplasia, Silverman-Handmaker type (DD-SH). METHODS: A retrospective review of three fetuses with confirmed DD-SH was conducted. The fetal ultrasound findings, the radiological characteristics, and the results of the mutation analysis of the heparan sulphate perlecan gene 2 (HSPG2) were reviewed. RESULTS: There were three cases in two families with DD-SH diagnosed prenatally. The main prenatal ultrasound and the radiological features of DD-SH were severe limb shortening and vertebral segmentation and fusion defects (anisospondyly). The DNA analysis of the HSPG2 gene showed that the two affected fetuses in a nonconsanguineous family had a compound heterozygote for the c.646G > T transversion in exon 7 and a c.5788C > T transition in exon 46. The fetus born to the consanguineous couple had a homozygous mutation c.1356-27_1507 + 59del. CONCLUSION: DD-SH can be diagnosed prenatally using fetal ultrasound as early as 13 weeks. Xrays and DNA analysis of the HSPG2 gene are important for the confirmation of the diagnosis and for the preimplantation and prenatal diagnosis in pregnancies at risk. © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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In the mouse, the Grueneberg ganglion (GG) is an olfactory subsystem implicated both in chemo- and thermo-sensing. It is specifically involved in the recognition of volatile danger cues such as alarm pheromones and structurally-related predator scents. No evidence for these GG sensory functions has been reported yet in other rodent species. In this study, we used a combination of histological and physiological techniques to verify the presence of a GG and investigate its function in the rat, hamster, and gerbil comparing with the mouse. By scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and transmitted electron microscopy (TEM), we found isolated or groups of large GG cells of different shapes that in spite of their gross anatomical similarities, display important structural differences between species. We performed a comparative and morphological study focusing on the conserved olfactory features of these cells. We found fine ciliary processes, mostly wrapped in ensheating glial cells, in variable number of clusters deeply invaginated in the neuronal soma. Interestingly, the glial wrapping, the amount of microtubules and their distribution in the ciliary processes were different between rodents. Using immunohistochemistry, we were able to detect the expression of known GG proteins, such as the membrane guanylyl cyclase G and the cyclic nucleotide-gated channel A3. Both the expression and the subcellular localization of these signaling proteins were found to be species-dependent. Calcium imaging experiments on acute tissue slice preparations from rodent GG demonstrated that the chemo- and thermo-evoked neuronal responses were different between species. Thus, GG neurons from mice and rats displayed both chemo- and thermo-sensing, while hamsters and gerbils showed profound differences in their sensitivities. We suggest that the integrative comparison between the structural morphologies, the sensory properties, and the ethological contexts supports species-dependent GG features prompted by the environmental pressure.

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Abstract : Apoptosis is an evolutionarily conserved cellular suicide mechanism that can be triggered by activation of various pathways, such as the Fas-Pathway. Upon stimulation by its specific ligand (FasL), present at the surface of Cytotoxic Τ lymphocytes, the death receptor Fas initiates a signaling cascade culminating in the activation of cellular caspases, leading thus to cell death of the target cell (e.g. transformed cell). Dysregulation of apoptosis in general, and of Fas pathway in particular, was shown to contribute to pathogenesis of cancers and many human diseases. Even though, during the last decades the molecular mechanisms of apoptosis have been widely studied, it is important to better understand the mechanisms leading to apoptosis, to improve our understanding of pathological processes, and generate more subtle apoptosis-modulating therapies to fight cancer and other diseases. In order to identify new components of the Fas signaling pathway, a screen based on the mechanism of RNA interference was undertaken. After a first and a second manual whole-kinome screen, we identified several strong positive hits that showed a protection against Fas ligand-induced apoptosis with distinct siRNAs, notably STK11, an interesting tumor suppressor mutated in several sporadic and inherited cancers. The STK11 functional characterization reveals that this kinase represents an apically acting general pro-apoptotic modulator of the extrinsic pathway (FasL, TRAIL, TNF-induced apoptosis), but not of the intrinsic apoptotic pathway. The STK11 action on the Fas pathway was shown to be dependent on its kinase activity, but independent of AMPK, a well-characterized STK11 downstream substrate. Furthermore, STK11 was shown to interact with caspase-8, a major mediator of the extrinsic pathway, and modulate its activity through an unclear mechanism that may involve an STK11-dependant caspase-8 phosphorylation. This modification may allow a proper caspase-8 polyubiquitination and activation in p62 sequestosmes aggregates, but may also increase the activation of caspase-8 at the DISC level. In addition, we observed that STK11 modulate not only the apoptotic pathway induced by Fas engagement, but also FasL-induced JNK and NF- KB, sustaining an upstream role of this kinase in the pathway. In conclusion, our report reveals that STK11 is an important pro-apoptotic modulator of the Fas pathway in particular, and extrinsic pathway in general. Our finding could explain, at least partially, why inactivating mutations of the kinase leads to cancer, by allowing resistance to apoptosis and accordingly evasion of immune surveillance. Résumé : L'apoptose est un mécanisme de suicide cellulaire, conservé dans diverses espèces, et qui au niveau moléculaire est déclenché par différentes voies de signalisation, comme par exemple lors de l'activation du récepteur Fas. La liaison du ligand FasL au récepteur de la mort Fas, induit une cascade de signalisation qui conduit à l'activation des caspases. Les lymphocytes Τ cytotoxiques peuvent utiliser la voie Fas pour induire la mort et se débarrasser de cellules dangereuses pour le reste de l'organisme, tel que les cellules transformées. La dysrégulation de l'apoptose en général, et de la voie Fas en particulier, peut contribuer à diverses maladies telles que le cancer. Même si ces dernières décennies, les mécanismes moléculaires conduisant à l'apoptose ont été extensivement étudiés, il reste néanmoins important de mieux comprendre le phénomène d'apoptose, pour améliorer notre compréhension des processus pathologiques, mais surtout dans le but de développer de nouvelles thérapies ciblant l'apoptose contre le cancer et d'autres pathologies. Pour identifier de nouveau constituants de la voie Fas, un criblage génétique basé sur l'interférence à l'ARN a été entrepris. Après un premier et un deuxième criblage d'une librairie du kinome, nous avons identifié différentes protéines qui pourraient jouer un rôle positif dans la voie Fas, et en particulier la protéine suppresseur de tumeur STK11, qui est fréquemment mutée dans divers cancers sporadiques et héréditaires. La caractérisation fonctionnelle de STK11 a révélé que cette kinase était un modulateur apical de la voie extrinsèque de l'apoptose en général (Fas, TNF, TRAIL), mais pas de la voie intrinsèque. L'action de STK11 sur la voie Fas est dépendante de sa fonction kinase, mais indépendante de l'AMPK, un substrat bien caractérisé de STK11. De plus, STK11 interagît avec la caspase-8, un constituant majeur de la voie Fas, et module son activité, par un mécanisme encore peu clair qui pourrait impliquer une phosphorylation de la caspase-8 par STK11. Cette modification pourrait permettre une activation optimale de la caspase-8 en jouant un rôle dans le processus de polyubiquitination de la caspase-8, phénomène qui semble être important pour l'activation de la caspase-8 dans des agrégats protéiques avec p62, mais qui pourrait aussi augmenter son activation au niveau du DISC. Finalement, nous avons observé que STK11 modulait non seulement la voie apoptotique déclenchée par l'activation de Fas, mais aussi les voies non-apoptotiques de Fas, comme JNK et NF-KB. En conclusion notre étude, révèle que STK11 est un important modulateur pro- apoptotique de la voie Fas, et de la voie extrinsèque en général. Cette découverte pourrait expliquer, du moins partiellement, pourquoi les mutations inactivatrices de STK11 conduisent au cancer, par une augmentation de la résistance à l'apoptose et donc par l'évasion de la surveillance immunitaire.

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We karyotyped and sequenced 1,140 base pairs of the mitochondrial DNA cytochrome b of a specimen of Zarudny's rock shrew (Crocidura zarudnyi) from Baluchestan, southeastern Iran, to clarify its cytogenetic and molecular relationships with other Eurasian species of Crocidura. According to the karyotype (2N = 40, FN = 50), Zarudny's rock shrew belongs to the group of the lesser white-toothed shrew (C. suaveolens), which is different from other known crocidurine karyotypes, considering the combination of the diploid and fundamental number of chromosomes. Molecular results revealed that C. zarudnyi is included in a monophyletic clade with the C. suaveolens group, where it is a sister taxon to the others (mean Kimura 2-parameter distance = 9.7%).

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SUMMARY : The function of sleep for the organism is one of the most persistent and perplexing questions in biology. Current findings lead to the conclusion that sleep is primarily for the brain. In particular, a role for sleep in cognitive aspects of brain function is supported by behavioral evidence both in humans and animals. However, in spite of remarkable advancement in the understanding of the mechanisms underlying sleep generation and regulation, it has been proven difficult to determine the neurobiological mechanisms underlying the beneficial effect of sleep, and the detrimental impact of sleep loss, on learning and memory processes. In my thesis, I present results that lead to several critical steps forward in the link between sleep and cognitive function. My major result is the molecular identification and physiological analysis of a protein, the NR2A subunit of NMDA receptor (NMDAR), that confers sensitivity to sleep loss to the hippocampus, a brain structure classically involved in mnemonic processes. Specifically, I used a novel behavioral approach to achieve sleep deprivation in adult C57BL6/J mice, yet minimizing the impact of secondary factors associated with the procedure,.such as stress. By using in vitro electrophysiological analysis, I show, for the first time, that sleep loss dramatically affects bidirectional plasticity at CA3 to CA1 synapses in the hippocampus, a well established cellular model of learning and memory. 4-6 hours of sleep loss elevate the modification threshold for bidirectional synaptic plasticity (MT), thereby promoting long-term depression of CA3 to CA 1 synaptic strength after stimulation in the theta frequency range (5 Hz), and rendering long-term potentiation induction.more difficult. Remarkably, 3 hours of recovery sleep, after the deprivation, reset the MT at control values, thus re-establishing the normal proneness of synapses to undergo long-term plastic changes. At the molecular level, these functional changes are paralleled by a change in the NMDAR subunit composition. In particular, the expression of the NR2A subunit protein of NMDAR at CA3 to CA1 synapses is selectively and rapidly increased by sleep deprivation, whereas recovery sleep reset NR2A synaptic content to control levels. By using an array of genetic, pharmacological and computational approaches, I demonstrate here an obligatory role for NR2A-containing NMDARs in conveying the effect of sleep loss on CA3 to CAl MT. Moreover, I show that a genetic deletion of the NR2A subunit fully preserves hippocampal plasticity from the impact of sleep loss, whereas it does not alter sleepwake behavior and homeostatic response to sleep deprivation. As to the mechanism underlying the effects of the NR2A subunit on hippocampal synaptic plasticity, I show that the increased NR2A expression after sleep loss distinctly affects the contribution of synaptic and more slowly recruited NMDAR pools activated during plasticity-induction protocols. This study represents a major step forward in understanding the mechanistic basis underlying sleep's role for the brain. By showing that sleep and sleep loss affect neuronal plasticity by regulating the expression and function of a synaptic neurotransmitter receptor, I propose that an important aspect of sleep function could consist in maintaining and regulating protein redistribution and ion channel trafficking at central synapses. These findings provide a novel starting point for investigations into the connections between sleep and learning, and they may open novel ways for pharmacological control over hippocampal .function during periods of sleep restriction. RÉSUMÉ DU PROJET La fonction du sommeil pour l'organisme est une des questions les plus persistantes et difficiles dans la biologie. Les découvertes actuelles mènent à la conclusion que le sommeil est essentiel pour le cerveau. En particulier, le rôle du sommeil dans les aspects cognitifs est soutenu par des études comportementales tant chez les humains que chez les animaux. Cependant, malgré l'avancement remarquable dans la compréhension des mécanismes sous-tendant la génération et la régulation du sommeil, les mécanismes neurobiologiques qui pourraient expliquer l'effet favorable du sommeil sur l'apprentissage et la mémoire ne sont pas encore clairs. Dans ma thèse, je présente des résultats qui aident à clarifier le lien entre le sommeil et la fonction cognitive. Mon résultat le plus significatif est l'identification moléculaire et l'analyse physiologique d'une protéine, la sous-unité NR2A du récepteur NMDA, qui rend l'hippocampe sensible à la perte de sommeil. Dans cette étude, nous avons utilisé une nouvelle approche expérimentale qui nous a permis d'induire une privation de sommeil chez les souris C57BL6/J adultes, en minimisant l'impact de facteurs confondants comme, par exemple, le stress. En utilisant les techniques de l'électrophysiologie in vitro, j'ai démontré, pour la première fois, que la perte de sommeil est responsable d'affecter radicalement la plasticité bidirectionnelle au niveau des synapses CA3-CA1 de l'hippocampe. Cela correspond à un mécanisme cellulaire de l'apprentissage et de la mémoire bien établi. En particulier, 4-6 heures de privation de sommeil élèvent le seuil de modification pour la plasticité synaptique bidirectionnelle (SM). Comme conséquence, la dépression à long terme de la transmission synaptique est induite par la stimulation des fibres afférentes dans la bande de fréquences thêta (5 Hz), alors que la potentialisation à long terme devient plus difficile. D'autre part, 3 heures de sommeil de récupération sont suffisant pour rétablir le SM aux valeurs contrôles. Au niveau moléculaire, les changements de la plasticité synaptiques sont associés à une altération de la composition du récepteur NMDA. En particulier, l'expression synaptique de la protéine NR2A du récepteur NMDA est rapidement augmentée de manière sélective par la privation de sommeil, alors que le sommeil de récupération rétablit l'expression de la protéine au niveau contrôle. En utilisant des approches génétiques, pharmacologiques et computationnelles, j'ai démontré que les récepteurs NMDA qui expriment la sous-unité NR2A sont responsables de l'effet de la privation de sommeil sur le SM. De plus, nous avons prouvé qu'une délétion génétique de la sous-unité NR2A préserve complètement la plasticité synaptique hippocampale de l'impact de la perte de sommeil, alors que cette manipulation ne change pas les mécanismes de régulation homéostatique du sommeil. En ce qui concerne les mécanismes, j'ai .découvert que l'augmentation de l'expression de la sous-unité NR2A au niveau synaptique modifie les propriétés de la réponse du récepteur NMDA aux protocoles de stimulations utilisés pour induire la plasticité. Cette étude représente un pas en avant important dans la compréhension de la base mécaniste sous-tendant le rôle du sommeil pour le cerveau. En montrant que le sommeil et la perte de sommeil affectent la plasticité neuronale en régulant l'expression et la fonction d'un récepteur de la neurotransmission, je propose qu'un aspect important de la fonction du sommeil puisse être finalisé au règlement de la redistribution des protéines et du tracking des récepteurs aux synapses centraux. Ces découvertes fournissent un point de départ pour mieux comprendre les liens entre le sommeil et l'apprentissage, et d'ailleurs, ils peuvent ouvrir des voies pour des traitements pharmacologiques dans le .but de préserver la fonction hippocampale pendant les périodes de restriction de sommeil.

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Neuron-astrocyte reciprocal communication at synapses has emerged as a novel signalling pathway in brain function. Astrocytes sense the level of synaptic activity and, in turn, influence its efficacy through the regulated release of ''glio- transmitters'' such as glutamate, ATP or D-serine. A calcium- dependent exocytosis is proposed to drive the release of gliotransmitters but its existence is still debated. To shed light onto the mechanisms controlling the storage and the release of gliotransmitters and namely D-serine, we have developed a new method for the immunoisolation of synaptobrevin 2-positive vesicles from rat cortical astrocytes in culture. The purified organelles are clear round shape vesicles of excellent purity as judged by electron microscopy. Immunoblotting analysis revealed that isolated vesicles contain most of the major proteins already described for neuron-derived vesicles. In addition, we have analyzed the content for various amino acids of these vesicles by means of chiral capillary electro- phoresis coupled to laser-induced fluorescence detection and liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry. Post- embedding immunogold labelling of the rat neocortex and hippocampus further revealed the expression of D-serine and glutamate in astrocyte processes contacting excitatory sy- napses. Our results provide significant support for the existence of secretory glial vesicles storing chemical substances like D- serine and glutamate and thus point to the co-release of amino acids by exocytosis in astrocytes.

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The fatty acids from cocoa butters of different origins, varieties, and suppliers and a number of cocoa butter equivalents (Illexao 30-61, Illexao 30-71, Illexao 30-96, Choclin, Coberine, Chocosine-Illipe, Chocosine-Shea, Shokao, Akomax, Akonord, and Ertina) were investigated by bulk stable carbon isotope analysis and compound specific isotope analysis. The interpretation is based on principal component analysis combining the fatty acid concentrations and the bulk and molecular isotopic data. The scatterplot of the two first principal components allowed detection of the addition of vegetable fats to cocoa butters. Enrichment in heavy carbon isotope (C-13) of the bulk cocoa butter and of the individual fatty acids is related to mixing with other vegetable fats and possibly to thermally or oxidatively induced degradation during processing (e.g., drying and roasting of the cocoa beans or deodorization of the pressed fat) or storage. The feasibility of the analytical approach for authenticity assessment is discussed.

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ABSTRACT Allergic asthma is a major complication of atopy. Its severity correlates with the presence of activated T lymphocytes and eosinophils in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF). Mechanisms that protect against asthma are poorly understood. Based on oral models of mucosal tolerance induction, models using the nasal route showed that uptake of important amounts of antigen can induce tolerance and reverse the allergic phenotype. 1L-10 producing regulatory T cells were proposed as key players in tolerance induction, but other players, e.g. dendritic cells (DC), B cells and epithelial cells may have to be taken into consideration. The objective of the present study is to characterize the effects of a therapeutic intranasal treatment (INT) in a murine model of asthma and to determine, in this model, the cellular and molecular mechanisms leading to protection against asthma. First, we established an asthma model by sensitizing the BALB/c mouse to ovalbumin (OVA) by two intraperitoneal injections of alum-adsorbed OVA and three inhalations of aerosolized OVA. Then OVA was applied to the nasal mucosa of OVA- sensitized mice. Mice were later re-exposed to OVA aerosols to assess the protection induced by OVA INT. OVA sensitization induced strong eosinophil recruitment, OVA-specific T cell proliferation and IgE production. Three intranasal treatments at 24-hour intervals with 1.5 mg OVA drastically reduced inflammatory cell recruitment into the BALF and inhibited OVA-specific IgE production upon allergen re-exposure. T cell proliferation in ex vivo bronchial lymph node (BLN) cells was inhibited, as well as TH2 cytokine production. Protection against OVA-induced bronchial inflammation was effective for an extended period of time and treated mice resisted a second re-exposure. Transfer of CD4+ cells from BLN and lungs of OVA-treated mice protected asthmatic recipient mice from subsequent aerosol challenge indicating an involvement of CD4+ T regulatory cells in this protection. RESUME L'asthme allergique est une manifestation clinique majeure de l'atopie. La sévérité de l'asthme est liée à la présence de lymphocytes T activés ainsi que d'éosinophiles dans le lavage broncho-alvéolaire (LBA). Les mécanismes permettant de se prémunir contre l'asthme sont mal connus. Basés sur des modèles muqueux d'induction de tolérance par la voie orale, des modèles utilisant la voie nasale ont montré que d'importantes quantités d'antigène peuvent induire une tolérance et ainsi reverser le phénotype allergique. Des cellules régulatrices produisant de l'IL-10 pourraient jouer un rôle clé dans l'induction de la tolérance mais d'autres acteurs tels que les cellules dendritiques, les cellules B et les cellules épithéliales doivent aussi être prises en compte. L'objectif de la présente étude est de caractériser les effets d'un traitement intranasal thérapeutique dans un modèle murin d'asthme et de déterminer dans ce modèle les mécanismes cellulaires et moléculaires conférant une protection contre l'asthme. En premier lieu, un modèle d'asthme allergique a été établi en sensibilisant des souris BALB/c à l'ovalbumine (OVA) par deux injections intraperitonéales d'OVA adsorbé sur de l'alum et trois séances d'OVA en aérosol. Dans un second temps, de l'OVA a été administrée sur la muqueuse nasale des souris sensibilisées à l'OVA. Les souris furent ensuite challengées par des aérosols d'OVA afin d'évaluer la protection conférée par le traitement intranasal à l'OVA. La sensibilisation à l'OVA a induit un fort recrutement d'éosinophiles, une réponse proliférative des cellules T à l'OVA ainsi qu'une production d'lgE spécifiques. Trois traitements intranasaux à 24 heures d'intervalle avec 1.5 mg d'OVA ont permis de réduire drastiquement le recrutement des cellules inflammatoires dans le LBA ainsi que d'inhiber la production d'lgE spécifiques à l'OVA produits lors d'une ré-exposition à l'OVA. La prolifération en réponse à l'OVA de cellules extraites ex vivo de ganglions bronchiques a, elle aussi, été inhibée de même que la production de cytokines TH2. La protection contre l'inflammation provoquée par l'aérosol est efficace pour une longue période et les souris traitées résistent à une seconde ré- exposition. Le transfert de cellules CD4+ issues de ganglions bronchiques et de poumons de souris traitées à l'OVA protège les souris asthmatiques receveuses contre les effets inflammatoires d'un aérosol, indiquant que des cellules T CD4+ régulatrices pourraient être impliquées dans cette protection. RESUME DESTINE A UN LARGE PUBLIC L'asthme est une affection des voies respiratoires qui se caractérise par une contraction de la musculature des voies aériennes, une production de mucus et d'anticorps de l'allergie (IgE). On parle d'asthme allergique lorsque les facteurs déclenchant l'asthme sont des allergènes inhalés tels que acariens, pollens ou poils d'animaux. Le système immunitaire des patients asthmatiques a un défaut de programmation qui le rend réactif à des substances qui sont normalement inoffensives. Le traitement actuel de l'asthme repose sur le soulagement des symptômes grâce à des produits à base de stéroïdes. Les techniques permettant de reprogrammer le système immunitaire (immunothérapie) ne sont pas efficaces pour tous les antigènes et prennent beaucoup de temps. En conséquence, il est nécessaire de mieux comprendre les mécanismes sous-tendant une telle reprogrammation afin d'en améliorer le rendement et l'efficacité. Dans ce but, des modèles d'immunothérapie ont été mis au point chez la souris. Ils permettent une plus grande liberté d'investigation. Dans cette étude, un modèle d'asthme allergique dans la souris a été établi par une sensibilisation à un antigène particulier : l'ovalbumine (OVA). Ce modèle présente les caractéristiques principales de l'asthme humain : recrutement de cellules inflammatoires dans les poumons, augmentation de la production d'anticorps et de la résistance des bronches aux flux respiratoires. Cette souris asthmatique a ensuite été traitée par application nasale d'OVA. Comparées aux souris non traitées, les souris traitées à l'OVA ont moins de cellules inflammatoires dans leurs poumons et produisent moins d'anticorps IgE. D'autres marqueurs inflammatoires sont aussi fortement diminués. Des cellules de poumons ou de ganglions bronchiques prélevées sur des souris traitées injectées dans des souris asthmatiques améliorent les symptômes de l'asthme. Ces cellules pourraient donc avoir un rôle régulateur dans l'asthme. Les caractériser et les étudier afin d'être capable de les générer est crucial pour les futures thérapies de l'asthme.

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Fragile X-associated tremor/ataxia syndrome (FXTAS) is an adult-onset neurodegenerative disorder associated with premutation alleles of the fragile X mental retardation 1 (FMR1) gene. Approximately 40% of older male premutation carriers, and a smaller proportion of females, are affected by FXTAS; due to the lower penetrance the characterization of the disorder in females is much less detailed. Core clinical features of FXTAS include intention tremor, cerebellar gait ataxia and frequently parkinsonism, autonomic dysfunction and cognitive deficits progressing to dementia in up to 50% of males. In this study, we report the clinical, molecular and neuropathological findings of eight female premutation carriers. Significantly, four of these women had dementia; of the four, three had FXTAS plus dementia. Post-mortem examination showed the presence of intranuclear inclusions in all eight cases, which included one asymptomatic premutation carrier who died from cancer. Among the four subjects with dementia, three had sufficient number of cortical amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles to make Alzheimer's disease a highly likely cause of dementia and a fourth case had dementia with cortical Lewy bodies. Dementia appears to be more common than originally reported in females with FXTAS. Although further studies are required, our observation suggests that in a portion of FXTAS cases there is Alzheimer pathology and perhaps a synergistic effect on the progression of the disease may occur.

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To complement the existing treatment guidelines for all tumour types, ESMO organises consensus conferences to focus on specific issues in each type of tumour. The Second ESMO Consensus Conference on Lung Cancer was held on 11-12 May 2013 in Lugano. A total of 35 experts met to address several questions on management of patients with non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) in each of four areas: pathology and molecular biomarkers, early stage disease, locally advanced disease and advanced (metastatic) disease. For each question, recommendations were made including reference to the grade of recommendation and level of evidence. This consensus paper focuses on recommendations for pathology and molecular biomarkers in relation to the diagnosis of lung cancer, primarily non-small-cell carcinomas.

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The combination of multiple exostoses (EXT) and enlarged parietal foramina (foramina parietalia permagna, FPP) represent the main features of the proximal 11p deletion syndrome (P11pDS), a contiguous gene syndrome (MIM 601224) caused by an interstitial deletion on the short arm of chromosome 11. Here we present clinical aspects of two new P11pDS patients and the clinical follow-up of one patient reported in the original paper describing this syndrome. Recognised clinical signs include EXT, FPP, mental retardation, facial asymmetry, asymmetric calcification of coronary sutures, defective vision (severe myopia, nystagmus, strabismus), skeletal anomalies (small hands and feet, tapering fingers), heart defect, and anal stenosis. In addition fluorescence in situ hybridisation and molecular analysis were performed to gain further insight in potential candidate genes involved in P11pDS.

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PURPOSE: To report the first case of choroidal schwannoma in a patient affected by PTEN hamartoma tumor syndrome (PHTS) and investigate the molecular involvement of the phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) and neurofibromin 2 (NF2) genes in this rare intraocular tumor. DESIGN: Observational case report. PARTICIPANT: A 10-year-old girl diagnosed with PHTS. METHODS: The enucleated specimen underwent histologic, immunohistochemical, and transmission electronic microscopy. The expression of PTEN and NF2 and their protein products were evaluated by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction and immunohistochemistry. Somatic mutations of PTEN and NF2, as well as allelic loss, were investigated by direct sequencing of DNA extracted from the tumor. PTEN epigenetic silencing was investigated by pyrosequencing. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Histopathologic and molecular characterization of a choroidal pigmented schwannoma. RESULTS: Histopathologic, immunohistochemical, and electron microscopic analysis demonstrated features consistent with a pigmented cellular schwannoma of the choroid. We found no loss of heterozygosity at the genomic level for the PTEN germline mutation and no promoter hypermethylation or other somatic intragenic mutations. However, we observed an approximate 40% reduction of PTEN expression at both the mRNA and the protein level, indicating that the tumor was nonetheless functionally deficient for PTEN. Although DNA sequencing of NF2 failed to identify any pathologic variants, its expression was abolished within the tumor. CONCLUSIONS: We report the first description of a pigmented choroidal schwannoma in the context of a PHTS. This rare tumor showed a unique combination of reduction of PTEN and absence of NF2 expression.

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The tubero-infundibular and nigrostriatal DA neurone systems of rats respond to systemic (i.p.) injection of alpha-MSH (2-100 microgram/kg). The response of the tubero-infundibular (arcuate) DA neurones, an increase in cellular fluorescence intensity which can be interpreted as a sign of increased neuronal activity, is essentially the same in males, estrogen-progesterone-pretreated ovariectomized females and hypophysectomized males, whereas the type of response elicited by alpha-MSH in the nigral DA neurones depends upon the hormonal state of the animal. Differences between the two DA neurone groups exist also with regard to the effects of peptide fragments containing the two active sites of the alpha-MSH molecule. Results of lesion experiments in the lower brainstem (area postrema) and of blockade of muscarinic mechanisms by atropine further point to differences in the mechanisms underlying the peptide effects on the two neurone systems. The reaction of the tubero-infundibular DA system (which controls the pars intermedia of the pituitary) can be considered to reflect the activation of a feedback mechanism on MSH secretion, while the functional counterpart of the changes observed in the nigral system remains unknown at the present time.