237 resultados para NLS-like equations
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Since the first reports of induction of adipose-derived stem cells (ASC) into neuronal and glial cell phenotypes, expectations have increased regarding their use in tissue engineering applications for nerve repair. Cell adhesion to extracellular matrix (ECM) is a basic feature of survival, differentiation, and migration of Schwann cells (SC) during nerve regeneration, and fibronectin and laminin are two key molecules of this process. Interaction between ECM and SC-like differentiated ASC (dASC) could potentially improve the neurotrophic potential of the stem cells. We have investigated the effect of ECM molecules on SC-like dASC in terms of proliferation, adhesion, and cell viability. Fibronectin and laminin did not affect the proliferation of dASC when compared with cell adherent tissue culture plastic, but significantly improved viability and cell attachment when dASC were exposed to apoptotic conditions. To assess the influence of the ECM molecules on dASC neurotrophic activity, dASC were seeded onto ECM-coated culture inserts suspended above dorsal root ganglia (DRG) sensory neurons. Neurite outgrowth of DRG neurons was enhanced when dASC were seeded on fibronectin and laminin when compared with controls. When DRG neurons and dASC were in direct contact on the various surfaces there was significantly enhanced neurite outgrowth and coculture with laminin-conditioned dASC produced the longest neurites. Compared with primary SCs, dASC grown on laminin produced similar levels of neurite outgrowth in the culture insert experiments but neurite length was shorter in the direct contact groups. Anti β1 integrin blocking antibody could inhibit baseline and dASC evoked neurite elongation but had no effect on outgrowth mediated by laminin-conditioned dASC. ECM molecules had no effect on the levels of nerve growth factor and brain-derived neurotrophic factor secretion from dASC. The results of the study suggest that ECM molecules can significantly improve the potential of dASC for nerve regeneration.
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Abstract: The genesis of the cardiac action potential, which accounts for the cardiac contraction, is due to the sodium current INa mediated by the voltage-gated sodium channel Nav1.5. Several cardiac arrhythmias such as the Brugada syndrome are known te be caused by mutations in SCN5A, the gene encoding Nav1.5. Studies of these mutations allowed a better understanding of biophysical and functional properties of Nav1.5. However, only few investigations have been performed in order to understand the regulation of Nav1.5. During my thesis, I investigated different mechanisms of regulation of Nav1.5 using a heterologous expression system, HEK293 cells, coupled with a technique of sodium current recording: the patch clamp in whole cell configuration. In previous studies it has been shown that an enzyme of the Nedd4 family (Nedd4-2) regulates an epithelial sodium channel via the interaction with PY-motifs present in the latter. Interestingly, Nav1.5 contains a similar PY-motif, which motivated us to study the role of Nedd4-2 expressed in heart for the regulation of Nav1.5. In a second study, we investigated the implication of two Nav1.5 mutants, which were either less functional or net functional (Nav1.5 R535X and Nav1.5 L325R respectively) implied in the genesis of the Brugada syndrome by fever. Our results established two mechanisms implied in Nav1.5 regulation. The first one implies that following the interaction between the PY-motif of Nav1.5 and Nedd4- 2 Nav1.5 is ubiquitinated by Nedd4-2. This ubiquitination leads to the internalization of Nav1 .5. The second mechanism is a phenomenon called the "dominant negative" effect of Nav1.5 L325R on Nay1.5 where the decrease of 'Na is potentially due to the retention of Nav1.5 by Nav1.5 L325R in an undefined intracellular compartment. These studies defined two mechanisms of Nav1.5 regulation, which could play an important role for the genesis of cardiac arrhythmias where molecular processes are still poorly understood. Résumé La genèse du potentiel d'action cardiaque, permettant la contraction cardiaque, est due au courant sodique INa issu des canaux sodiques cardiaques dépendants du voltage Nav1.5. Nombreuses arythmies cardiaques telles que le syndrome de Brugada sont connues pour être liées à des mutations du gène SCN5A, codant pour Nav1.5. L'étude de ces mutations a permis une meilleure compréhension des propriétés structurelles et fonctionnelles de Nav1.5 et leurs implications dans la genèse de ces pathologies. Néanmoins peu d'études ont été menées afin de comprendre les mécanismes de régulation de Nav1.5. Mon travail de thèse a consisté à étudier des mécanismes de régulation de Nav1.5 en utilisant un système d'expression hétérologue, les cellules HEK293, couplé à une technique d'enregistrement des courants sodiques, le "patch clamp" en configuration cellule entière. La présence sur Nav1.5 d'un motif-PY similaire à ceux nécessaires pour la régulation d'un canal épithélial sodique par une enzyme de la famille de Nedd4, nous a amenée à étudier le rôle de ces ubiquitine-ligases, en particulier Nedd4-2, dans la régulation de Nav1.5. La seconde étude s'est intéressée aux conséquences de deux mutations de SCN5A codant pour deux mutants peu ou pas fonctionnels (Nav1.5 L325R et Nav1.5 R535X respectivement) retrouvées chez des patients présentant un syndrome de Brugada exacerbé par un état fébrile. Nos résultats ont permis d'établir deux mécanismes de régulation de Nav1.5 L'un par Nedd4-2 qui implique rubiquitination de Nav1.5 par cette ligase suite à l'interaction entre le motif-PY de Nav1.5 et Nedd4-2. Cette modification déclenche l'internalisation du canal impliquée dans la diminution d'INa. Le second mécanisme quant à lui est un effet "dominant négatif" de Nav1.5 L325R sur Nav1.5 aboutissant à une diminution d'INa suite à la séquestration intracellulaire potentielle de Nav1.5 par Nav1.5 L325R. Ces études ont mis en évidence deux mécanismes de régulation de Nav1.5 pouvant jouer un rôle majeur dans la genèse et/ou l'accentuation des arythmies cardiaques dont les processus moléculaires au sein des cardiomyocytes, impliquant des modifications du courant sodiques, sont encore mal compris. Résumé destiné à un large public La dépolarisation électrique de la membrane des cellules cardiaques permet la contraction du coeur. La génèse de cette activité électrique est due au courant sodique issu d'un type de canal à sodium situé dans la membrane des cellules cardiaques. De nombreuses pathologies provoquant des troubles du rythme cardiaque sont issues de mutations du gène qui code pour ce canal à sodium. Ces canaux mutants, entrainant diverses pathologies cardiaques telles que le syndrome de Brugada, ont été largement étudiées. Néanmoins, peu de travaux ont été réalisés sur les mécanismes de régulation de ce canal à sodium non muté. Mon travail de thèse a consisté à étudier certains des mécanismes de régulation de ce canal à sodium en utilisant une technique permettant l'enregistrement des courants sodiques issus de l'expression de ces canaux à sodium à la membrane de cellules mammifères. La présence sur ce canal à sodium d'une structure spécifique, similaire à celle nécessaire pour la régulation d'un canal épithélial à sodium par une enzyme appelée Nedd4-2, nous a amenée à étudier le rôle de cette enzyme dans la régulation de ce canal à sodium. La seconde étude s'est intéressée aux rôles de deux mutations du gène codant pour ce canal à sodium retrouvées chez des patients présentant un syndrome de Brugada exacerbé par la fièvre. Nos résultats nous ont permis d'établir deux mécanismes de régulation de ce canal à sodium diminuant le courant sodique l'un par l'action de l'enzyme Nedd4-2, suite à son interaction avec ce canal, qui modifie ce canal à sodium (ubiquitination) diminuant de ce fait la densité membranaire du canal. L'autre par un mécanisme suggérant un effet négatif de l'un des canaux mutants sur l'expression à la membrane du canal à sodium non muté. Ces études ont mis en évidence deux mécanismes de régulation de ce canal à sodium pouvant jouer un rôle majeur dans la genèse et/ou l'accentuation des troubles du rythme cardiaques dont les mécanismes cellulaires sont encore incompris.
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When competing over parental resources, young animals may be typically selfish to the point of siblicide. This suggests that limited parental resources promote the evolution of sibling competition rather than altruistic or cooperative behaviours. In striking contrast, we show here that in 71% of experimental three-chick broods, nestling barn owls, Tyto alba, gave food to their siblings on average twice per night. This behaviour prevailed in the first-born dominant nestlings rather than the last-born subordinate nestlings. It was also more prevalent in individuals displaying a heritable dark phaeomelanin-based coloration, a typical female-specific plumage trait (owls vary from dark reddish to white, females being on average darker reddish than males). Stealing food items from siblings, which occurred in 81% of the nests, was more frequent in light than dark phaeomelanic dominant nestlings. We suggest that food sharing has evolved in the barn owl because parents store prey items in their nest that can be used by the offspring to feed their nestmates to derive indirect (kin selection) or direct benefits (pseudoreciprocity or by-product mutualism). The cost of feeding siblings may be relatively low for dominant individuals while the indirect genetic benefits could be high given that extrapair paternity is infrequent in this species. Thus, in situations in which young animals have access to more food resources than they currently need, they can altruistically share them with their siblings.
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BACKGROUND: Insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) and C-reactive protein (CRP) may be positively associated with the risk of epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) but no previous studies have investigated their associations with non-epithelial ovarian cancers (NEOC). METHODS: A case-control study was nested within the Finnish Maternity Cohort. Case subjects were 58 women diagnosed with sex cord-stromal tumors (SCST) and 30 with germ cell tumors (GCT) after recruitment. Control subjects (144 for SCST and 74 for GCT) were matched for age, parity, and date of blood donation of the index case. RESULTS: Doubling of IGF-I concentration was not related to maternal risk of either SCST (OR 0.97, 95% CI 0.58-1.62) or GCT (OR 1.13, 95% CI 0.51-2.51). Similarly, doubling of CRP concentrations was not related to maternal risk of either SCST (OR 1.10, 95% CI 0.85-1.43) or GCT (OR 0.93, 95% CI 0.68-1.28). CONCLUSIONS: Pre-diagnostic IGF-I and CRP concentrations during the first trimester of pregnancy were not associated with increased risk of NEOC in the mother. Risk factors for NEOC may differ from those of EOC.
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The therapeutic activity of selective serotonin (5-HT) reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) relies on long-term adaptation at pre- and post-synaptic levels. The sustained administration of SSRIs increases the serotonergic neurotransmission in response to a functional desensitization of the inhibitory 5-HT1A autoreceptor in the dorsal raphe. At nerve terminal such as the hippocampus, the enhancement of 5-HT availability increases brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) synthesis and signaling, a major event in the stimulation of adult neurogenesis. In physiological conditions, BDNF would be expressed at functionally relevant levels in neurons. However, the recent observation that SSRIs upregulate BDNF mRNA in primary cultures of astrocytes strongly suggest that the therapeutic activity of antidepressant drugs might result from an increase in BDNF synthesis in this cell type. In this study, by overexpressing BDNF in astrocytes, we balanced the ratio between astrocytic and neuronal BDNF raising the possibility that such manipulation could positively reverberate on anxiolytic-/antidepressant-like activities in transfected mice. Our results indicate that BDNF overexpression in hippocampal astrocytes produced anxiolytic-/antidepressant-like activity in the novelty suppressed feeding in relation with the stimulation of hippocampal neurogenesis whereas it did not potentiate the effects of the SSRI fluoxetine on these parameters. Moreover, overexpressing BDNF revealed the anxiolytic-like activity of fluoxetine in the elevated plus maze while attenuating 5-HT neurotransmission in response to a blunted downregulation of the 5-HT1A autoreceptor. These results emphasize an original role of hippocampal astrocytes in the synthesis of BDNF, which can act through neurogenesis-dependent and -independent mechanisms to regulate different facets of anxiolytic-like responses.
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Tissue microarray technology was used to establish immunohistochemistry protocols and to determine the specificity of new antisera against various Chlamydia-like bacteria for future use on formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded tissues. The antisera exhibited strong reactivity against autologous antigen and closely related heterologous antigen, but no cross-reactivity with distantly related species.
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Functional divergence between homologous proteins is expected to affect amino acid sequences in two main ways, which can be considered as proxies of biochemical divergence: a "covarion-like" pattern of correlated changes in evolutionary rates, and switches in conserved residues ("conserved but different"). Although these patterns have been used in case studies, a large-scale analysis is needed to estimate their frequency and distribution. We use a phylogenomic framework of animal genes to answer three questions: 1) What is the prevalence of such patterns? 2) Can we link such patterns at the amino acid level with selection inferred at the codon level? 3) Are patterns different between paralogs and orthologs? We find that covarion-like patterns are more frequently detected than "constant but different," but that only the latter are correlated with signal for positive selection. Finally, there is no obvious difference in patterns between orthologs and paralogs.
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Broad-spectrum inhibitors of HDACs are therapeutic in many inflammatory disease models but exacerbated disease in a mouse model of atherosclerosis. HDAC inhibitors have anti- and proinflammatory effects on macrophages in vitro. We report here that several broad-spectrum HDAC inhibitors, including TSA and SAHA, suppressed the LPS-induced mRNA expression of the proinflammatory mediators Edn-1, Ccl-7/MCP-3, and Il-12p40 but amplified the expression of the proatherogenic factors Cox-2 and Pai-1/serpine1 in primary mouse BMM. Similar effects were also apparent in LPS-stimulated TEPM and HMDM. The pro- and anti-inflammatory effects of TSA were separable over a concentration range, implying that individual HDACs have differential effects on macrophage inflammatory responses. The HDAC1-selective inhibitor, MS-275, retained proinflammatory effects (amplification of LPS-induced expression of Cox-2 and Pai-1 in BMM) but suppressed only some inflammatory responses. In contrast, 17a (a reportedly HDAC6-selective inhibitor) retained anti-inflammatory but not proinflammatory properties. Despite this, HDAC6(-/-) macrophages showed normal LPS-induced expression of HDAC-dependent inflammatory genes, arguing that the anti-inflammatory effects of 17a are not a result of inhibition of HDAC6 alone. Thus, 17a provides a tool to identify individual HDACs with proinflammatory properties.
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Here we present a processing route to produce multi-structured ceramic foams based on the combination of particle-stabilized foams with polymeric sponges to produce positive and negative templating structures. Polyester sponges are infiltrated with freshly produced calcium aluminate alumina foams and upon sintering either positive templating structures are produced when wetting the sponges, or negative templating foams with a percolating pore network are obtained when completely filling the sponges. Additionally, by combining different layers of these particle-stabilized foam infiltrated sponges, various different structures can be produced, including sandwich structures, pore size gradients, and ceramic bone-like structures applying to different types of bone. The particle-stabilized foams used were in situ self-hardening calcium aluminate cement enriched alumina foams to obtain crack-free samples with pore interconnections and tailorable pore sizes.
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Thymic T cell lineage commitment is dependent on Notch1 (N1) receptor-mediated signaling. Although the physiological ligands that interact with N1 expressed on thymic precursors are currently unknown, in vitro culture systems point to Delta-like 1 (DL1) and DL4 as prime candidates. Using DL1- and DL4-lacZ reporter knock-in mice and novel monoclonal antibodies to DL1 and DL4, we show that DL4 is expressed on thymic epithelial cells (TECs), whereas DL1 is not detected. The function of DL4 was further explored in vivo by generating mice in which DL4 could be specifically inactivated in TECs or in hematopoietic progenitors. Although loss of DL4 in hematopoietic progenitors did not perturb thymus development, inactivation of DL4 in TECs led to a complete block in T cell development coupled with the ectopic appearance of immature B cells in the thymus. These immature B cells were phenotypically indistinguishable from those developing in the thymus of conditional N1 mutant mice. Collectively, our results demonstrate that DL4 is the essential and nonredundant N1 ligand responsible for T cell lineage commitment. Moreover, they strongly suggest that N1-expressing thymic progenitors interact with DL4-expressing TECs to suppress B lineage potential and to induce the first steps of intrathymic T cell development.
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BACKGROUND: Elevated serum concentrations of insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-1 have been associated with increased risk of breast cancer. Previously, we reported a similar association in samples obtained during pregnancy. The current study was conducted to further characterize the association of IGF-1 during pregnancy with maternal breast cancer risk. METHODS: A case-control study was nested within the Finnish Maternity Cohort. The study was limited to primiparous women less than 40 years of age, who donated blood samples during early (median, 12 weeks) pregnancy and delivered a single child at term. Seven hundred and nineteen women with invasive breast cancer were eligible. Two controls (n = 1,434) were matched to each case on age and date at blood donation. Serum IGF-1 concentration was measured using an Immulite 2000 analyzer. Conditional logistic regression was used to estimate odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI).RESULTS: No significant associations were observed between serum IGF-1 concentrations and breast cancer risk in both the overall analysis (OR 1.08 (95% CI 0.80-1.47) and in analyses stratified by histological subtype, lag-time to cancer diagnosis, age at pregnancy or age at diagnosis.CONCLUSIONS: There was no association between IGF-1 and maternal breast cancer risk during early pregnancy in this large nested case-control study.Impact:Serum IGF-1 concentrations during early pregnancy may not be related to maternal risk of breast cancer.
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Floral bilateral symmetry (zygomorphy) has evolved several times independently in angiosperms from radially symmetrical (actinomorphic) ancestral states. Homologs of the Antirrhinum majus Cycloidea gene (Cyc) have been shown to control floral symmetry in diverse groups in core eudicots. In the basal eudicot family Ranunculaceae, there is a single evolutionary transition from actinomorphy to zygomorphy in the stem lineage of the tribe Delphinieae. We characterized Cyc homologs in 18 genera of Ranunculaceae, including the four genera of Delphinieae, in a sampling that represents the floral morphological diversity of this tribe, and reconstructed the evolutionary history of this gene family in Ranunculaceae. Within each of the two RanaCyL (Ranunculaceae Cycloidea-like) lineages previously identified, an additional duplication possibly predating the emergence of the Delphinieae was found, resulting in up to four gene copies in zygomorphic species. Expression analyses indicate that the RanaCyL paralogs are expressed early in floral buds and that the duration of their expression varies between species and paralog class. At most one RanaCyL paralog was expressed during the late stages of floral development in the actinomorphic species studied whereas all paralogs from the zygomorphic species were expressed, composing a species-specific identity code for perianth organs. The contrasted asymmetric patterns of expression observed in the two zygomorphic species is discussed in relation to their distinct perianth architecture.
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For a better understanding of the complex coevolutionary processes between hosts and parasites, accurate identification of the actors involved in the interaction is of fundamental importance. Blood parasites of the Order Haemosporidia, responsible for malaria, have become the focus of a broad range of studies in evolutionary biology. Interestingly, molecular-based studies on avian malaria have revealed much higher species diversity than previously inferred with morphology. Meanwhile, studies on bat haemosporidian have been largely neglected. In Europe, only one genus (Polychromophilus) and two species have been morphologically described. To evaluate the presence of potential cryptic species and parasite prevalence, we undertook a molecular characterization of Polychromophilus in temperate zone bats. We used a nested-PCR approach on the cytochrome b mitochondrial gene to detect the presence of parasites in 237 bats belonging to four different species and in the dipteran bat fly Nycteribia kolenatii, previously described as being the vector of Polychromophilus. Polychromophilus murinus was found in the four bat species and in the insect vector with prevalence ranging from 4% for Myotis myotis to 51% for M. daubentoni. By sequencing 682 bp, we then investigated the phylogenetic relationships of Polychromophilus to other published malarial lineages. Seven haplotypes were found, all very closely related, suggesting the presence of a single species in our samples. These haplotypes formed a well-defined clade together with Haemosporidia of tropical bats, revealing a worldwide distribution of this parasite mostly neglected by malarial studies since the 1980s.