134 resultados para molecular profiling
Resumo:
Imaging mass spectrometry (IMS) is an emergent and innovative approach for measuring the composition, abundance and regioselectivity of molecules within an investigated area of fixed dimension. Although providing unprecedented molecular information compared with conventional MS techniques, enhancement of protein signature by IMS is still necessary and challenging. This paper demonstrates the combination of conventional organic washes with an optimized aqueous-based buffer for tissue section preparation before matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) IMS of proteins. Based on a 500 mM ammonium formate in water-acetonitrile (9:1; v/v, 0.1% trifluororacetic acid, 0.1% Triton) solution, this buffer wash has shown to significantly enhance protein signature by profiling and IMS (~fourfold) when used after organic washes (70% EtOH followed by 90% EtOH), improving the quality and number of ion images obtained from mouse kidney and a 14-day mouse fetus whole-body tissue sections, while maintaining a similar reproducibility with conventional tissue rinsing. Even if some protein losses were observed, the data mining has demonstrated that it was primarily low abundant signals and that the number of new peaks found is greater with the described procedure. The proposed buffer has thus demonstrated to be of high efficiency for tissue section preparation providing novel and complementary information for direct on-tissue MALDI analysis compared with solely conventional organic rinsing.
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We have previously reported that in tumorigenic pancreatic beta-cells, calcitriol exerts a potent antitumorigenic effect by inducing apoptosis, cell growth inhibition, and reduction of solid beta-cell tumors. Here we have studied the molecular pathways involved in the antineoplastic activity of calcitriol on mouse insulinoma beta TC(3) cells, mouse insulinoma beta TC expressing or not expressing the oncogene p53, and beta TC-tet cells overexpressing or not the antiapoptotic gene Bcl2. Our results indicate that calcitriol-induced apoptosis was dependent on the function of p53 and was associated with a biphasic increase in protein levels of transcription factor nuclear factor-kappa B. Calcitriol decreased cell viability by about 40% in p53-retaining beta TC and in beta TC(3) cells; in contrast, beta TC p53(-/-) cells were only minimally affected. Calcitriol-induced cell death was regulated by members of the Bcl-2 family of apoptosis regulatory proteins, as shown by calcitriol-induced up-regulation of proapoptotic Bax and Bak and the lack of calcitriol-induced cytotoxicity in Bcl-2-overexpressing insulinoma cells. Moreover, calcitriol-mediated arrest of beta TC(3) cells in the G(1) phase of the cell cycle was associated with the abnormal expression of p21 and G(2)/M-specific cyclin B2 genes and involved the DNA damage-inducible factor GADD45. Finally, in beta TC(3) cells, calcitriol modulated the expression of IGF-I and IGF-II genes. In conclusion, these findings contribute to the understanding of the antitumorigenic effects of calcitriol on tumorigenic pancreatic beta-cells and further support the rationale of its utilization in the treatment of patients with malignant insulinomas.
Resumo:
Recent progress in the experimental determination of protein structures allow to understand, at a very detailed level, the molecular recognition mechanisms that are at the basis of the living matter. This level of understanding makes it possible to design rational therapeutic approaches, in which effectors molecules are adapted or created de novo to perform a given function. An example of such an approach is drug design, were small inhibitory molecules are designed using in silico simulations and tested in vitro. In this article, we present a similar approach to rationally optimize the sequence of killer T lymphocytes receptors to make them more efficient against melanoma cells. The architecture of this translational research project is presented together with its implications both at the level of basic research as well as in the clinics.
Resumo:
The development of targeted treatment strategies adapted to individual patients requires identification of the different tumor classes according to their biology and prognosis. We focus here on the molecular aspects underlying these differences, in terms of sets of genes that control pathogenesis of the different subtypes of astrocytic glioma. By performing cDNA-array analysis of 53 patient biopsies, comprising low-grade astrocytoma, secondary glioblastoma (respective recurrent high-grade tumors), and newly diagnosed primary glioblastoma, we demonstrate that human gliomas can be differentiated according to their gene expression. We found that low-grade astrocytoma have the most specific and similar expression profiles, whereas primary glioblastoma exhibit much larger variation between tumors. Secondary glioblastoma display features of both other groups. We identified several sets of genes with relatively highly correlated expression within groups that: (a). can be associated with specific biological functions; and (b). effectively differentiate tumor class. One prominent gene cluster discriminating primary versus nonprimary glioblastoma comprises mostly genes involved in angiogenesis, including VEGF fms-related tyrosine kinase 1 but also IGFBP2, that has not yet been directly linked to angiogenesis. In situ hybridization demonstrating coexpression of IGFBP2 and VEGF in pseudopalisading cells surrounding tumor necrosis provided further evidence for a possible involvement of IGFBP2 in angiogenesis. The separating groups of genes were found by the unsupervised coupled two-way clustering method, and their classification power was validated by a supervised construction of a nearly perfect glioma classifier.
Resumo:
Résumé Régulation de l'expression de la Connexin36 dans les cellules sécrétrices d'insuline La communication intercellulaire est en partie assurée via des jonctions communicantes de type "gap". Dans la cellule ß pancréatique, plusieurs observations indiquent que le couplage assuré par des jonctions gap formées parla Connexine36 (Cx36) est impliqué dans le contrôle de la sécrétion de l'insuline. De plus, nous avons récemment démontré qu'un niveau précis d'expression de la Cx36 est nécessaire pour maintenir une bonne coordination de l'ensemble des cellules ß, et permettre ainsi une sécrétion synchrone et contrôlée d'insuline. Le développement du diabète et du syndrome métabolique est partiellement dû à une altération de la capacité des cellules ß à sécréter de l'insuline en réponse à une augmentation de la glycémie. Cette altération est en partie causée par l'augmentation prolongée des taux circulant de glucose, mais aussi de lipides, sous la forme d'acides gras libres, et de LDL (Low Density Lipoproteins), particules assurant le transport des acides gras et du cholestérol dans le sang. Nous avons étudié la régulation de l'expression de la Cx36 dans différentes conditions reflétant la physiopathologie du diabète de type 2 et du syndrome métabolique et démontré qu'une exposition prolongée à des concentrations élevées de glucose, de LDL, ainsi que de palmitate (acide gras saturé le plus abondant dans l'organisme), inhibent l'expression de la Cx36 dans les cellules ß. Cette inhibition implique l'activation de la PKA (Proteine Kinase A), qui stimule à son tour l'expression du facteur de transcription ICER-1 (Inductible cAMP Early Repressor-1). Ce puissant répresseur se fixe spécifiquement sur un motif CRE (cAMP Response Element), situé dans le promoteur du gène de la Cx36, inhibant ainsi son expression. Nous avons de plus démontré que des cytokines pro-inflammatoires, qui pourraient contribuer au développement du diabète, inhibent également l'expression de la Cx36. Cependant, les cytokines agissent indépendamment du répresseur ICER-1, mais selon un mécanisme requérant l'activation de l'AMPK (AMP dependant protein kinase). Sachant qu'un contrôle précis des niveaux d'expression de la Cx36 est un élément déterminant pour une sécrétion optimale de l'insuline, nos résultats suggèrent que la Cx36 pourrait être impliquée dans l'altération de la sécrétion de l'insuline contribuant à l'apparition du diabète de type 2. Summary A particular way by which cells communicate with each other is mediated by gap junctions, transmembrane structures providing a direct pathway for the diffusion of small molecules between adjacent cells. Gap junctional communication is required to maintain a proper functioning of insulin-secreting ß-cells. Moreover, the expression levels of connexin36 (Cx36), the sole gap junction protein expressed in ß-cells, are critical in maintaining glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. Chronic hyperglycemia and hyperlipidemia exert deleterious effects on insulin secretion and may contribute to the progressive ß-cell failure linked to the development of type 2 diabetes and metabolic syndrome. Since modulations of the Cx36 levels might impair ß-cell function, the general aim of this work was to elucidate wether elevated levels of glucose and lipids affect Cx36 expression. The first part of this work was dedicated to the study of the effect of high glucose concentrations on Cx36 expression. We demonstrated that glucose transcriptionally down-regulates the expression of Cx36 in insulin-secreting cells through activation of the protein kinase A (PKA), which in turn stimulates the expression of the inducible cAMP early repressor-1 (ICER-1). This repressor binds to a highly conserved cAMP response element (CRE) located in the Cx36 promoter, thereby inhibiting Cx36 expression. The second part of this thesis consisted in studying the effects of sustained exposure to free fatty acids (FFA) and human lipoproteins on Cx36 levels. The experiments revealed that the most abundant FFA, palmitate, as well as the atherogenic low density lipoproteins (LDL), also stimulate ICER-1 expression, resulting in Cx36 down-regulation. Finally, the third part of the work focused on the consequences of long-term exposure to proinflammatory cytokines on Cx36 content. Interleukin-1 ß (IL-1 ß) inhibits Cx36 expression and its effect is potentialized by tumor necrosis factor α (TNFα) and interferon γ (IFNγ). We further unveiled that the cytokines effect on Cx36 levels requires activation of the AMP dependent protein kinase (AMPK). Prolonged exposures to glucose, palmitate, LDL, and pro-inflammatory cytokines have all been proposed to contribute to the development of diabetes and metabolic syndrome. Since Cx36 expression levels are critical to maintain ß-cell function, Cx36 down-regulation by glucose, lipids, and cytokines might participate to the ß-cell failure associated with diabetes development.
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Autosomal recessive cutis laxa type I (ARCL type I) is characterized by generalized cutis laxa with pulmonary emphysema and/or vascular complications. Rarely, mutations can be identified in FBLN4 or FBLN5. Recently, LTBP4 mutations have been implicated in a similar phenotype. Studying FBLN4, FBLN5, and LTBP4 in 12 families with ARCL type I, we found bi-allelic FBLN5 mutations in two probands, whereas nine probands harbored biallelic mutations in LTBP4. FBLN5 and LTBP4 mutations cause a very similar phenotype associated with severe pulmonary emphysema, in the absence of vascular tortuosity or aneurysms. Gastrointestinal and genitourinary tract involvement seems to be more severe in patients with LTBP4 mutations. Functional studies showed that most premature termination mutations in LTBP4 result in severely reduced mRNA and protein levels. This correlated with increased transforming growth factor-beta (TGFβ) activity. However, one mutation, c.4127dupC, escaped nonsense-mediated decay. The corresponding mutant protein (p.Arg1377Alafs(*) 27) showed reduced colocalization with fibronectin, leading to an abnormal morphology of microfibrils in fibroblast cultures, while retaining normal TGFβ activity. We conclude that LTBP4 mutations cause disease through both loss of function and gain of function mechanisms.
Resumo:
AIM: Antidoping procedures are expected to greatly benefit from untargeted metabolomic approaches through the discovery of new biomarkers of prohibited substances abuse. RESULTS: Endogenous steroid metabolites were monitored in urine samples from a controlled elimination study of testosterone undecanoate after ingestion. A platform coupling ultra-high pressure LC with high-resolution quadrupole TOF MS was used and high between-subject metabolic variability was successfully handled using a multiblock data analysis strategy. Links between specific subsets of metabolites and influential genetic polymorphisms of the UGT2B17 enzyme were highlighted. CONCLUSION: This exploratory metabolomic strategy constitutes a first step toward a better understanding of the underlying patterns driving the high interindividual variability of steroid metabolism. Promising biomarkers were selected for further targeted study.
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GnRH neurons provide the primary driving force upon the neuroendocrine reproductive axis. Here we used GnV-3 cells, a model of conditionally immortalized GnRH-expressing neurons, to perform an analysis of cell cycle and compare the gene expression profile of proliferating cells with differentiated cells. In the proliferation medium, 45 ± 1.5% of GnV-3 cells are in S-phase by FACS analysis. In the differentiation medium, only 9 ± 0.9% of them are in S-phase, and they acquire the characteristic bipolar shape displayed by preoptic GnRH neurons in vivo. In addition, GnV-3 cells in the differentiated state exhibit electrophysiological properties characteristic of neurons. Transcriptomic analysis identified up-regulation of 1931 genes and down-regulation of 1270 genes in cells grown in the differentiation medium compared to cells in the proliferation medium. Subsequent gene ontology study indicated that genes over-expressed in proliferating GnV-3 cells were mainly involved in cell cycle regulations, whereas genes over-expressed in differentiated cells were mainly involved in processes of differentiation, neurogenesis and neuronal morphogenesis. Taken together, these data demonstrate the occurrence of morphological and physiological changes in GnV-3 cells between the proliferating and the differentiated state. Moreover, the genes differentially regulated between these two different states are providing novel pathways potentially important for a better understanding of the physiology of mature GnRH neurons.
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Inter-individual differences in gene expression are likely to account for an important fraction of phenotypic differences, including susceptibility to common disorders. Recent studies have shown extensive variation in gene expression levels in humans and other organisms, and that a fraction of this variation is under genetic control. We investigated the patterns of gene expression variation in a 25 Mb region of human chromosome 21, which has been associated with many Down syndrome (DS) phenotypes. Taqman real-time PCR was used to measure expression variation of 41 genes in lymphoblastoid cells of 40 unrelated individuals. For 25 genes found to be differentially expressed, additional analysis was performed in 10 CEPH families to determine heritabilities and map loci harboring regulatory variation. Seventy-six percent of the differentially expressed genes had significant heritabilities, and genomewide linkage analysis led to the identification of significant eQTLs for nine genes. Most eQTLs were in trans, with the best result (P=7.46 x 10(-8)) obtained for TMEM1 on chromosome 12q24.33. A cis-eQTL identified for CCT8 was validated by performing an association study in 60 individuals from the HapMap project. SNP rs965951 located within CCT8 was found to be significantly associated with its expression levels (P=2.5 x 10(-5)) confirming cis-regulatory variation. The results of our study provide a representative view of expression variation of chromosome 21 genes, identify loci involved in their regulation and suggest that genes, for which expression differences are significantly larger than 1.5-fold in control samples, are unlikely to be involved in DS-phenotypes present in all affected individuals.
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Mammalian sex chromosomes stem from ancestral autosomes and have substantially differentiated. It was shown that X-linked genes have generated duplicate intronless gene copies (retrogenes) on autosomes due to this differentiation. However, the precise driving forces for this out-of-X gene "movement" and its evolutionary onset are not known. Based on expression analyses of male germ-cell populations, we here substantiate and extend the hypothesis that autosomal retrogenes functionally compensate for the silencing of their X-linked housekeeping parental genes during, but also after, male meiotic sex chromosome inactivation (MSCI). Thus, sexually antagonistic forces have not played a major role for the selective fixation of X-derived gene copies in mammals. Our dating analyses reveal that although retrogenes were produced ever since the common mammalian ancestor, selectively driven retrogene export from the X only started later, on the placental mammal (eutherian) and marsupial (metatherian) lineages, respectively. Together, these observations suggest that chromosome-wide MSCI emerged close to the eutherian-marsupial split approximately 180 million years ago. Given that MSCI probably reflects the spread of the recombination barrier between the X and Y, crucial for their differentiation, our data imply that these chromosomes became more widely differentiated only late in the therian ancestor, well after the divergence of the monotreme lineage. Thus, our study also provides strong independent support for the recent notion that our sex chromosomes emerged, not in the common ancestor of all mammals, but rather in the therian ancestor, and therefore are much younger than previously thought
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Among the PAH class of compounds, high molecular weight PAH are now considered as relevant cancer inducers, but not all of them have the same biological activity. However, their analysis is difficult, mainly due to the presence of numerous isomers and due to their low volatility. Retention indices (Ri) for 13 dibenzopyrenes and homologues were determined by high-resolution capillary gas chromatography (GC) with four different stationary phases: a 5% phenyl-substituted methylpolysiloxane column (DB-5 ms), a 35% phenyl-substituted methylpolysiloxane column (BPX-35), a 50% phenyl-substituted methylpolysiloxane column (BPX-50), and a 35% trifluoropropylmethyl polysiloxane stationary phase (Rtx-200). Correlations for retention on each phase were investigated by using 8 independent molecular descriptors. Ri has been shown to be linearly correlated to PAH volume, polarisability alpha, Hückel-pi energy on the four examined columns. Ionisation potential Ip is a fourth variable which improves the regression model for DB-5ms, BPX-35, and BPX-50 column. Correlation coefficients ranging from r2 = 0.935 to r2 = 0.952 are then observed. Application of these indices to the identification and quantification of PAH with MW 302 in certified diesel particulate matter SRM 1650a is presented and discussed. [Authors]