124 resultados para Apoptotic mechanism


Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

A 3D in vitro model of rat organotypic brain cell cultures in aggregates was used to investigate neurotoxicity mechanisms in methylmalonic aciduria. 1 mM methylmalonate (MMA), 2-methylcitrate (2-MCA) or propionate (PA) were repeatedly added to the culture media at two different time points of the cultures. In cultures treated with 2-MCA, we observed a significant increase of lactate in the medium, consistent with a possible inhibition of Krebs cycle and respiratory chain, as described earlier in the literature. Interestingly, we further observed that 2-MCA induced an important increase in ammonia production with concomitant decrease of glutamine concentrations, which suggests an inhibition of the astrocytic enzyme glutamine synthetase. These previously unreported findings may uncover a pathogenic mechanism in this disease with deleterious effects on early stages of brain development. By immunohistochemistry we could show that 2-MCA substantially increased the number of apoptotic cells. On the cellular level, 2-MCA had a toxic effect (cell swelling and cell death) on glial cells, but not on neurons. Surprisingly, MMA seemed to have a growth stimulating effect on the cultures. We can conclude that 2-MCA was the most toxic metabolite in our model for methylmalonic aciduria inducing ammonia accumulation and massive apoptosis in brain cells.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Background: To determine whether misalignment structures such as duplications, repeats, and palindromes are associated to insertions/deletions (indels) in gp120, indicating that indels are indeed frameshift mutations generated by DNA misalignment mechanism. Methods: Cloning and sequencing of a fragment of HIV-1 gp120 spanning C2-C4 derived from plasma RNA in 12 patients with early chronic disease and naïve to antiretroviral therapy. Results: Indels in V4 involved always insertion and deletion of duplicated nucleotide segments, and AAT repeats, and were associated to the presence of palindromic sequences. No duplications were detected in V3 and C3. Palindromic sequences occurred with similar frequencies in V3, C3 and V4; the frequency of palindromes in individual genes was found to be significantly higher in structural (gp120, p ≤ 3.00E-7) and significantly lower in regulatory (Tat, p ≤ 9.00E-7) genes, as compared to the average frequency calculated over the full genome. Discussion: Indels in V4 are associated to misalignment structures (i.e. duplications repeat and palindromes) indicating DNA misalignment as the mechanism underlying length variation in V4. The finding that indels in V4 are caused by DNA misalignment has some very important implications: 1) indels in V4 are likely to occur in proviral DNA (and not in RNA), after integration of HIV into the host genome; 2) they are likely to occur as progressive modifications of the early founder virus during chronic infection, as more and more cells get infected; 3) frameshift mutations involving any number of base pairs are likely to occur evenly across gp120; however, only those mutants carrying a functional gp120 (indels as multiples of three base pairs) will be able to perpetuate the virus cycle and to keep spreading through the population.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) protects beta-cells against apoptosis, increases their glucose competence, and induces their proliferation. We previously demonstrated that the anti-apoptotic effect was mediated by an increase in insulin-like growth factor-1 receptor (IGF-1R) expression and signaling, which was dependent on autocrine secretion of insulin-like growth factor 2 (IGF-2). Here, we further investigated how GLP-1 induces IGF-1R expression and whether the IGF-2/IGF-1R autocrine loop is also involved in mediating GLP-1-increase in glucose competence and proliferation. We show that GLP-1 up-regulated IGF-1R expression by a protein kinase A-dependent translational control mechanism, whereas isobutylmethylxanthine, which led to higher intracellular accumulation of cAMP than GLP-1, increased both IGF-1R transcription and translation. We then demonstrated, using MIN6 cells and primary islets, that the glucose competence of these cells was dependent on the level of IGF-1R expression and on IGF-2 secretion. We showed that GLP-1-induced primary beta-cell proliferation was suppressed by Igf-1r gene inactivation and by IGF-2 immunoneutralization or knockdown. Together our data show that regulation of beta-cell number and function by GLP-1 depends on the cAMP/protein kinase A mediated-induction of IGF-1R expression and the increased activity of an IGF-2/IGF-1R autocrine loop.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

In this issue of The EMBO Journal, Chattopadhyay et al (2010) describe a surprising new mechanism for how viral dsRNA detection by the RIG-I/MAVS signalling complex can initiate apoptosis. Independent of its transcriptional function, a pool of interferon regulatory factor (IRF)-3 activated downstream of MAVS can bind to and activate cytosolic Bax, resulting in Bax translocation to the mitochondria and initiation of the intrinsic apoptotic pathway.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

We previously showed in a 3D rat brain cell in vitro model for glutaric aciduria type-I that repeated application of 1mM 3-hydroxy-glutarate (3-OHGA) caused ammonium accumulation, morphologic alterations and induction of non-apoptotic cell death in developing brain cells. Here, we performed a dose-response study with lower concentrations of 3- OHGA.We exposed our cultures to 0.1, 0.33 and 1mM 3-OHGA every 12h over three days at two developmental stages (DIV5-8 and DIV11-14). Ammonium accumulation was observed at both stages starting from 0.1mM 3-OHGA, in parallel with a glutamine decrease. Morphological changes started at 0.33mM with loss of MBP expression and loss of astrocytic processes. Neurons were not substantially affected. At DIV8, release of LDH in the medium and cellular TUNEL staining increased from 0.1mM and 0.33mM 3-OHGA exposure, respectively. No increase in activated caspase-3 was observed. We confirmed ammonium accumulation and non-apoptotic cell death of brain cells in our in vitro model at lower 3-OHGA concentrations thus strongly suggesting that the observed effects are likely to take place in the brain of affected patients. The concomitant glutamine decrease suggests a defect in the astrocyte ammonium buffering system. Ammonium accumulation might be the cause of non-apoptotic cell death.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The purpose of this study was to verify in man the relationships of muscle glycogen synthase and phosphorylase activities with glycogen concentration that were reported in animal studies. The upper level of glycogen concentration in muscle is known to be tightly controlled, and glycogen concentration was reported to have an inhibitory effect on synthase activity and a stimulatory effect on phosphorylase activity. Glycogen synthase and phosphorylase activity and glycogen concentration were measured in muscle biopsies in a group of nine normal subjects after stimulating an increase of their muscle glycogen concentration through either an intravenous glucose-insulin infusion to stimulate glycogen synthesis, or an Intralipid (Vitrum, Stockholm, Sweden) infusion in the basal state to inhibit glycogen mobilization by favoring lipid oxidation at the expense of glucose oxidation. Phosphorylase activity increased from 71.3 +/- 21.0 to 152.8 +/- 20.0 nmol/min/mg protein (P < .005) after the glucose-insulin infusion. Phosphorylase activity was positively correlated with glycogen concentration (P = .005 and P = .0001) after the glucose-insulin and Intralipid infusions, respectively. Insulin-stimulated glycogen synthase activity was significantly negatively correlated with glycogen concentration at the end of the Intralipid infusion (P < .005). In conclusion, by demonstrating a negative correlation of glycogen concentration with glycogen synthase and a positive correlation with phosphorylase, this study might confirm in man the double-feedback mechanism by which changes in glycogen concentration regulate glycogen synthase and phosphorylase activities. It suggests that this mechanism might play an important role in the regulation of glucose storage.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Despite its small fraction of the total body weight (2%), the brain contributes for 20% and 25% respectively of the total oxygen and glucose consumption of the whole body. Indeed, glucose has been considered the energy substrate par excellence for the brain. However, evidence accumulated over the last half century revealed an important role for the monocarboxylate lactate in fulfilling the energy needs of neurons. This is particularly true during physiological neuronal activation and in pathological conditions. Lactate transport into and out of the cell is mediated by a family of proton-linked transporters called monocarboxylate transporters (MCTs). In the central nervous system, only three of them have been well characterized: MCT2 is the predominant neuronal isoform, while the other non¬neuronal cell types of the brain express the ubiquitous isoform MCT1. Quite recently, the MCT4 isoform has been described in astrocytes. Due to its high transport capacity compared to the other two isoforms, MCT4 is particularly adapted for glycolytic cells. Because of its recent discovery in the brain, nothing was known about its regulation in the central nervous system. Here we show that MCT4 is regulated by oxygen levels in primary cultures of astrocytes in a time- and concentration-dependent manner via the hypoxia inducible factor-la (HIF-la). Moreover, we showed that MCT4 expression is essential for astrocyte survival under low oxygen conditions. In parallel, we investigated the possible implication of the pyruvate kinase isoform Pkm2, a strong enhancer of glycolysis, in its regulation. Then we showed that MCT4 expression, as well as the expression of the other two MCT isoforms, is altered in a murine model of stroke. Surprisingly, neurons started to express MCT4, as well as MCT1, under such conditions. Altogether, these data suggest that MCT4, due to its high transport capacity for lactate, may be the isoform that enables cells to operate a major metabolic adaptation in response to pathological situations that alter metabolic homeostasis of the brain. -- Le cerveau représente 2% du poids corporel total, mais il contribue pour 20% de la consommation totale d'oxygène et 25% de celle de glucose au repos. Le glucose est considéré comme le substrat énergétique par excellence pour le cerveau. Néanmoins, depuis un demi- siècle maintenant, de plus en plus de travaux ont démontré que le lactate joue un rôle majeur dans le métabolisme cérébral et est capable du subvenir aux besoins énergétiques des neurones. Le lactate est tout particulièrement nécessaire pendant l'activation neuronale ainsi qu'en situation pathologique. Le transport du lactate à travers la barrière hématoencéphalique ainsi qu'à travers les membranes cellulaires est assuré par la famille des transporteurs aux monocarboxylates (MCTs). Dans le système nerveux central, uniquement trois d'entre eux ont été décrits: MCT2 est considéré comme le transporteur neuronal, alors que les autres types cellulaires qui constituent le cerveau expriment l'isoforme ubiquitaire MCT1. Récemment, l'isoforme MCT4 a été rapportée sur les astrocytes. Dû à sa grande capacité de transport pour le lactate, MCT4 est tout particulièrement adapté pour soutenir le métabolisme des cellules hautement glycolytiques, comme les astrocytes. En raison de sa toute récente découverte, les aspects comprenant sa régulation et son rôle dans le cerveau sont pour l'instant méconnus. Les résultats exposés dans ce travail démontrent dans un premier temps que l'expression de MCT4 est régulée par les niveaux d'oxygène dans les cultures d'astrocytes corticaux par le biais du facteur de transcription HIF-la. De plus, nous avons démontré que l'expression de MCT4 est essentielle à la survie des astrocytes quand le niveau d'oxygénation baisse. En parallèle, des résultats préliminaires suggèrent que l'isoforme 2 de la pyruvate kinase, un puissant régulateur de la glycolyse, pourrait jouer un rôle dans la régulation de MCT4. Dans la deuxième partie du travail nous avons démontré que l'expression de MCT4, ainsi que celle de MCT1 et MCT2, est altérée dans un modèle murin d'ischémie cérébrale. De façon surprenante, les neurones expriment MCT4 dans cette condition, alors que ce n'est pas le cas en condition physiologique. En tenant compte de ces résultats, nous suggérons que MCT4, dû à sa particulièrement grande capacité de transport pour le lactate, représente le MCT qui permet aux cellules du système nerveux central, notamment les astrocytes et les neurones, de s'adapter à de très fortes perturbations de l'homéostasie métabolique du cerveau qui surviennent en condition pathologique.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Arenaviruses are important emerging human pathogens maintained by noncytolytic persistent infection in their rodent reservoir hosts. Despite high levels of viral replication, persistently infected carrier hosts show only mildly elevated levels of type I interferon (IFN-I). Accordingly, the arenavirus nucleoprotein (NP) has been identified as a potent IFN-I antagonist capable of blocking activation of interferon regulatory factor 3 (IRF3) via the retinoic acid inducible gene (RIG)-I/mitochondrial antiviral signaling (MAVS) pathway. Another important mechanism of host innate antiviral defense is represented by virus-induced mitochondrial apoptosis via RIG-I/MAVS and IRF3. In the present study, we investigated the ability of the prototypic Old World arenavirus lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) to interfere with RIG-I/MAVS-dependent apoptosis. We found that LCMV does not induce apoptosis at any time during infection. While LCMV efficiently blocked induction of IFN-I via RIG-I/MAVS in response to superinfection with cytopathic RNA viruses, virus-induced mitochondrial apoptosis remained fully active in LCMV-infected cells. Notably, in LCMV-infected cells, RIG-I was dispensable for virus-induced apoptosis via MAVS. Our study reveals that LCMV infection efficiently suppresses induction of IFN-I but does not interfere with the cell's ability to undergo virus-induced mitochondrial apoptosis as a strategy of innate antiviral defense. The RIG-I independence of mitochondrial apoptosis in LCMV-infected cells provides the first evidence that arenaviruses can reshape apoptotic signaling according to their needs. IMPORTANCE: Arenaviruses are important emerging human pathogens that are maintained in their rodent hosts by persistent infection. Persistent virus is able to subvert the cellular interferon response, a powerful branch of the innate antiviral defense. Here, we investigated the ability of the prototypic arenavirus lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) to interfere with the induction of programmed cell death, or apoptosis, in response to superinfection with cytopathic RNA viruses. Upon viral challenge, persistent LCMV efficiently blocked induction of interferons, whereas virus-induced apoptosis remained fully active in LCMV-infected cells. Our studies reveal that the persistent virus is able to reshape innate apoptotic signaling in order to prevent interferon production while maintaining programmed cell death as a strategy for innate defense. The differential effect of persistent virus on the interferon response versus its effect on apoptosis appears as a subtle strategy to guarantee sufficiently high viral loads for efficient transmission while maintaining apoptosis as a mechanism of defense.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

BACKGROUND: Haplodiploidy, where females develop from diploid, fertilized eggs and males from haploid, unfertilized eggs, is abundant in some insect lineages. Some species in these lineages reproduce by thelytoky that is caused by infection with endosymbionts: infected females lay haploid eggs that undergo diploidization and develop into females, while males are very rare or absent. It is generally assumed that in thelytokous wasps, endosymbionts merely diploidize the unfertilized eggs, which would then trigger female development. RESULTS: We found that females in the parasitoid wasp Asobara japonica infected with thelytoky-inducing Wolbachia produce 0.7-1.2 % male offspring. Seven to 39 % of these males are diploid, indicating that diploidization and female development can be uncoupled in A. japonica. Wolbachia titer in adults was correlated with their ploidy and sex: diploids carried much higher Wolbachia titers than haploids, and diploid females carried more Wolbachia than diploid males. Data from introgression lines indicated that the development of diploid individuals into males instead of females is not caused by malfunction-mutations in the host genome but that diploid males are most likely produced when the endosymbiont fails to activate the female sex determination pathway. Our data therefore support a two-step mechanism by which endosymbionts induce thelytoky in A. japonica: diploidization of the unfertilized egg is followed by feminization, whereby each step correlates with a threshold of endosymbiont titer during wasp development. CONCLUSIONS: Our new model of endosymbiont-induced thelytoky overthrows the view that certain sex determination mechanisms constrain the evolution of endosymbiont-induced thelytoky in hymenopteran insects. Endosymbionts can cause parthenogenesis through feminization, even in groups in which endosymbiont-diploidized eggs would develop into males following the hosts' sex determination mechanism. In addition, our model broadens our understanding of the mechanisms by which endosymbionts induce thelytoky to enhance their transmission to the next generation. Importantly, it also provides a novel window to study the yet-poorly known haplodiploid sex determination mechanisms in haplodiploid insects.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Fluorescent proteins that can switch between distinct colors have contributed significantly to modern biomedical imaging technologies and molecular cell biology. Here we report the identification and biochemical analysis of a green-shifted red fluorescent protein variant GmKate, produced by the introduction of two mutations into mKate. Although the mutations decrease the overall brightness of the protein, GmKate is subject to pH-dependent, reversible green-to-red color conversion. At physiological pH, GmKate absorbs blue light (445 nm) and emits green fluorescence (525 nm). At pH above 9.0, GmKate absorbs 598 nm light and emits 646 nm, far-red fluorescence, similar to its sequence homolog mNeptune. Based on optical spectra and crystal structures of GmKate in its green and red states, the reversible color transition is attributed to the different protonation states of the cis-chromophore, an interpretation that was confirmed by quantum chemical calculations. Crystal structures reveal potential hydrogen bond networks around the chromophore that may facilitate the protonation switch, and indicate a molecular basis for the unusual bathochromic shift observed at high pH. This study provides mechanistic insights into the color tuning of mKate variants, which may aid the development of green-to-red color-convertible fluorescent sensors, and suggests GmKate as a prototype of genetically encoded pH sensors for biological studies.