392 resultados para pro-drug
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Introduction: Apoptosis plays a central role in chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. Although the activation of cell death signals has been reported, HCV infection persists in most patients suggesting a pro-survival adaptation, eventually developing hepatocellular carcinoma. This study focused on the role of mitochondria in the activation of pro- and antiapoptotic response in cells expressing HCV proteins. Materials and Methods: Human Osteosarcoma U2-OS cells inducibly expressing the HCV polyprotein; huh7.5 hepatoma cells transfected with full length HCV genome. Results: Long term induction of viral proteins in U2-OS cells induced a cyclosporine A-sensitive cytochrome c partial release from mitochondria, revealed by immunofluorescence, western blot and spectral analysis. In HCV-transfected Huh7.5 cells, release of the apoptosis inducing factor (AIF) with no apparent nuclear translocation was also observed. HCV positive cells displayed an HIF-dependent enhanced glycolysis, charachterized by up-regulation of the mitochondria-bound Hexokinase II (HKII); preliminary data on signal transduction pathway revealed the iperphosphorylation of Glycogen synthase kinase 3b(GSK3b). Conclusion: HCV causes a cell stress activating an early apoptotic response, the entity of which likely depends on the cell type. Nevertheless a wide series of cell survival mechanisms are also triggered resulting in a metabolic adaptation possibly favouring carcinogenesis. Based on our results, we propose a pro-survival mechanism linking HCV infection to inhibition of GSK-3b, stabilization of HIF1a and up-regulation of HKII, the last events causing a glycolytic shift and protecting from apoptosis.
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OBJECTIVES: Comparison of doxorubicin uptake, leakage and spatial regional blood flow, and drug distribution was made for antegrade, retrograde, combined antegrade and retrograde isolated lung perfusion, and pulmonary artery infusion by endovascular inflow occlusion (blood flow occlusion), as opposed to intravenous administration in a porcine model. METHODS: White pigs underwent single-pass lung perfusion with doxorubicin (320 mug/mL), labeled 99mTc-microspheres, and Indian ink. Visual assessment of the ink distribution and perfusion scintigraphy of the perfused lung was performed. 99mTc activity and doxorubicin levels were measured by gamma counting and high-performance liquid chromatography on 15 tissue samples from each perfused lung at predetermined localizations. RESULTS: Overall doxorubicin uptake in the perfused lung was significantly higher (P = .001) and the plasma concentration was significantly lower (P < .0001) after all isolated lung perfusion techniques, compared with intravenous administration, without differences between them. Pulmonary artery infusion (blood flow occlusion) showed an equally high doxorubicin uptake in the perfused lung but a higher systemic leakage than surgical isolated lung perfusion (P < .0001). The geometric coefficients of variation of the doxorubicin lung tissue levels were 175%, 279%, 226%, and 151% for antegrade, retrograde, combined antegrade and retrograde isolated lung perfusion, and pulmonary artery infusion by endovascular inflow occlusion (blood flow occlusion), respectively, compared with 51% for intravenous administration (P = .09). 99mTc activity measurements of the samples paralleled the doxorubicin level measurements, indicating a trend to a more heterogeneous spatial regional blood flow and drug distribution after isolated lung perfusion and blood flow occlusion compared with intravenous administration. CONCLUSIONS: Cytostatic lung perfusion results in a high overall doxorubicin uptake, which is, however, heterogeneously distributed within the perfused lung.
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The three peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs) isotypes (PPAR alpha, beta/delta and gamma) belong to the nuclear hormone receptor family. During the last decade, they have been identified as anti-inflammatory transcription factors. Part of this regulation antiinflammatory is mediated through negative interference between PPARs and other nuclear factors such as NFkB, AP-1 and C/EBP, which regulate innate as well as adaptative immunity. In addition, the PPARs control the functions of macrophages, B cells and T cells. In this review, we summarise the pathways through which the PPARs control inflammatory responses. We also discuss the potential utilisation of PPAR specific ligands in the treatment of inflammatory diseases, such as inflammatory bowel diseases, atherosclerosis, Parkinson's and Alzheimer's diseases.
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Mutations of GPCRs can increase their constitutive (agonist-independent) activity. Some of these mutations have been artificially introduced by site-directed mutagenesis; others occur spontaneously in human diseases. The analysis of constitutively active GPCR mutants has attracted a large interest in the past decade, providing an important contribution to our understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying receptor function and drug action.
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This study was designed to investigate the lifestyle and substance use habits of dance music event attendees together with their attitudes toward prevention of substance misuse, harm reduction measures and health-care resources. A total of 302 attendees aged 16-46 years (mean=22.70, S.D.=4.65) were randomly recruited as they entered dance music events. Rates for lifetime and current use (last 30 days) were particularly high for alcohol (95.3% and 86.6%, respectively), cannabis (68.8% and 53.8%, respectively), ecstasy (40.4% and 22.7%, respectively) and cocaine (35.9% and 20.7%, respectively). Several patterns of substance use could be identified: 52% were alcohol and/or cannabis only users, 42% were occasional poly-drug users and 6% were daily poly-drug users. No significant difference was observed between substance use patterns according to gender. Pure techno and open-air events attracted heavier drug users. Psychological problems (such as depressed mood, sleeping problems and anxiety attacks), social problems, dental disorders, accidents and emergency treatment episodes were strongly related to party drug use. Party drug users appeared to be particularly receptive to harm reduction measures, such as on-site emergency staff, pill testing and the availability of cool water, and to prevention of drug use provided via counseling. The greater the involvement in party drug use, the greater the need for prevention personnel to be available for counseling. General practitioners appeared to be key professionals for accessing health-care resources.
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Background and aims: there is little information regar ding changes in antihypertensive drug treatment in Switzerland. We aimed at assessing those changes in a population-based, prospective study. Methods: 768 hypertensive subjects (372 women, 397 men) followed for 5 years. Subjects were defined as continuers (no change), switchers (one antihypertensive class replace by another), combiners (one antihypertensive class added) and discontinuers (stopped treatment). Results: Analysis of all patients (mono or combination therapy) showed that 54.6% were continuers, 27.2% combiners, 12.9% switchers and 5.3 % discontinuers. Similar findings were obtained for participants on monotherapy only: 42.2% continuers, 36.7% combiners, 13.4% switchers and 7.7% discontinuers. Combiners had higher systolic and diastolic blood pressure values at baseline than the other groups (p<0.001), while no difference were found for personal and family history and other clinical and biological variables. Compared to continuers, combiners and switchers improved their blood pressure status at follow-up: 26.7% of combiners and 26.3% of switchers improved, versus 17.7% of continuers and 7.3% of discontinuers (p<0.001). Among participants on monotherapy at baseline, continuation was greatest for angiotensin II type 1 receptor blocking agents (ARBs, 53.1%), angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (44.4%) and β-blockers (41.8%). Only one quarter of participants treated with diuretic or calcium channel blockers at baseline remained so at follow-up. Conclusion: Antihypertensivedrug treatment is very stable in Switzerland. There are no big differences in persistence between antihypertensive classes, even if ARBs had the most favorable utilization pattern. Changes are only due to blood pressure level and improve blood pressure status.
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The activation of the transcription factor NF-kappaB often results in protection against apoptosis. In particular, pro-apoptotic tumor necrosis factor (TNF) signals are blocked by proteins that are induced by NF-kappaB such as TNFR-associated factor 1 (TRAF1). Here we show that TRAF1 is cleaved after Asp-163 when cells are induced to undergo apoptosis by Fas ligand (FasL). The C-terminal cleavage product blocks the induction of NF-kappaB by TNF and therefore functions as a dominant negative (DN) form of TRAF1. Our results suggest that the generation of DN-TRAF1 is part of a pro-apoptotic amplification system to assure rapid cell death.
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Measuring antibiotic-induced killing relies on time-consuming biological tests. The firefly luciferase gene (luc) was successfully used as a reporter gene to assess antibiotic efficacy rapidly in slow-growing Mycobacterium tuberculosis. We tested whether luc expression could also provide a rapid evaluation of bactericidal drugs in Streptococcus gordonii. The suicide vectors pFW5luc and a modified version of pJDC9 carrying a promoterless luc gene were used to construct transcriptional-fusion mutants. One mutant susceptible to penicillin-induced killing (LMI2) and three penicillin-tolerant derivatives (LMI103, LMI104, and LMI105) producing luciferase under independent streptococcal promoters were tested. The correlation between antibiotic-induced killing and luminescence was determined with mechanistically unrelated drugs. Chloramphenicol (20 times the MIC) inhibited bacterial growth. In parallel, luciferase stopped increasing and remained stable, as determined by luminescence and Western blots. Ciprofloxacin (200 times the MIC) rapidly killed 1.5 log10 CFU/ml in 2-4 hr. Luminescence decreased simultaneously by 10-fold. In contrast, penicillin (200 times the MIC) gave discordant results. Although killing was slow (< or = 0.5 log10 CFU/ml in 2 hr), luminescence dropped abruptly by 50-100-times in the same time. Inactivating penicillin with penicillinase restored luminescence, irrespective of viable counts. This was not due to altered luciferase expression or stability, suggesting some kind of post-translational modification. Luciferase shares homology with aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase and acyl-CoA ligase, which might be regulated by macromolecule synthesis and hence affected in penicillin-inhibited cells. Because of resemblance, luciferase might be down-regulated simultaneously. Luminescence cannot be universally used to predict antibiotic-induced killing. Thus, introducing reporter enzymes sharing mechanistic similarities with normal metabolic reactions might reveal other effects than those expected.
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Schizophrenia, which results from an interaction between gene and environmental factors, is a psychiatric disorder characterized by reality distortion. The clinical symptoms, which are generally diagnosed in late adolescence or early adulthood, partly derive from altered brain connectivity especially in prefrontal cortex. Disruption of neuronal networks implies oligodendrocyte and myelin abnormalities in schizophrenia pathophysiology. The mechanisms of these impairments are still unclear. Converging evidences indicate a role of redox dysregulation, generated by an imbalance between pro-oxidants and antioxidant defense mechanisms, in the development of schizophrenia pathophysiology. In particular, genetic and biochemical data indicate impaired synthesis of glutathione, the main cellular antioxidant and redox regulator. As oligodendrocyte maturation is dependent on redox state, we evaluated whether abnormal redox control could contribute to oligodendrocyte and myelin impairments in schizophrenia. We found that glutathione in prefrontal cortex of early psychosis patients and control subjects positively correlated with white matter integrity. We then further explored the interplay between glutathione and myelin using a translational approach. Our data showed that in mice with genetically impaired glutathione synthesis, oligodendrocyte late maturation as well as myelination was delayed in the anterior cingulate cortex. Specifically, oligodendrocyte number and myelin levels were lowered at peripubertal age, coincident in time with the peak of myelin- related gene expression during normal brain development. These data suggest that early adolescence is a vulnerable developmental period during which an adequate redox control is required for oligodendrocyte maturation and active myelination process. Consistently, oxidative stress mediated by psychosocial stress also delayed myelination in peripubertal mice. At cellular levels, impaired glutathione synthesis altered oligodendrocyte development at several levels. Using oligodendrocyte progenitor cells cultures, our data showed that glutathione deficiency was associated with (i) cell cycle arrest and a reduction in oligodendrocyte proliferation, and (ii) an impairment in oligodendrocyte maturation. Abnormal oligodendrocyte proliferation was mediated by upregulation of Fyn kinase activity. Consistently, under oxidative stress conditions, we observed abnormal regulation of Fyn kinase in fibroblasts of patients deficient in glutathione synthesis. Together, our data support that a redox dysregulation due to glutathione deficit could underlie myelination impairment in schizophrenia, possibly mediated by dysregulated Fyn pathway. Better characterization of Fyn mechanisms would pave the way towards new drug targets. -- La schizophrénie est une maladie psychiatrique qui se définit par une distorsion de la perception de la réalité. Les symptômes cliniques sont généralement diagnostiqués durant l'adolescence ou au début de l'âge adulte et proviennent de troubles de la connectivité, principalement au niveau du cortex préfrontal. Les dysfonctionnements des réseaux neuronaux impliquent des anomalies au niveau des oligodendrocytes et de la myéline dans la pathophysiologie de la schizophrénie. Les mécanismes responsables des ces altérations restent encore mal compris. Dans le développement de la schizophrénie, des évidences mettent en avant un rôle de la dérégulation rédox, traduit par un déséquilibre entre facteurs pro-oxydants et défenses antioxydantes. Des données génétiques et biochimiques indiquent notamment un défaut de la synthèse du glutathion, le principal antioxydant et rédox régulateur des cellules. Etant donné que la maturation des oligodendrocytes est dépendante de l'état rédox, nous avons regardé si une dérégulation rédox contribue aux anomalies de la myéline dans le cadre de la schizophrénie. Dans le cortex préfrontal des sujets contrôles et des patients en phase précoce de psychose, nous avons montré que le glutathion était positivement associé à l'intégrité de matière blanche. Afin d'explorer plus en détail la relation entre le glutathion et la myéline, nous avons mené une étude translationnelle. Nos résultats ont montré que des souris ayant un déficit de la synthèse du glutathion présentaient un retard dans les processus de maturation des oligodendrocytes et de la myélinisation dans le cortex cingulaire antérieure. Plus précisément, le nombre d'oligodendrocytes et le taux de myéline étaient uniquement diminués durant la période péripubertaire. Cette même période correspond au pic de l'expression des gènes en lien avec la myéline. Ces données soulignent le fait que l'adolescence est une période du développement particulièrement sensible durant laquelle un contrôle adéquat de l'état rédox est nécessaire aux processus de maturation des oligodendrocytes et de myélinisation. Ceci est en accord avec la diminution de myéline observée suite à un stress oxydatif généré par un stress psychosocial. Au niveau cellulaire, un déficit du glutathion affecte le développement des oligodendrocytes à différents stades. En effet, dans des cultures de progéniteurs d'oligodendrocytes, nos résultats montrent qu'une réduction du taux de glutathion était associée à (i) un arrêt du cycle cellulaire ainsi qu'une diminution de la prolifération des oligodendrocytes, et à (ii) des dysfonctionnements de la maturation des oligodendrocytes. Par ailleurs, au niveau moléculaire, les perturbations de la prolifération étaient générées par une augmentation de l'activité de la kinase Fyn. Ceci est en accord avec la dérégulation de Fyn observée dans les fibroblastes de patients ayant une déficience en synthèse du glutathion en condition de stress oxydatif. Les résultats de cette thèse soulignent qu'une dérégulation rédox induite par un déficit en glutathion peut contribuer aux anomalies des oligodendrocytes et de la myéline via le dysfonctionnement des voies de signalisation Fyn. Une recherche plus avancée de l'implication de Fyn dans la maladie pourrait ouvrir la voie à de nouvelles cibles thérapeutiques.
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Arterial hypertension is a highly heterogeneous condition. It is therefore not surprising that blood pressure lowering agents acting via a given mechanism allow a normalization of blood pressure in a fraction of hypertensive subjects only. The combination of drugs with different mechanisms of action on the cardiovascular system results in a considerably higher antihypertensive efficacy, not only with regard to the absolute blood pressure reduction but also in the number of responders. This effect is not achieved at the expenses of tolerance, because usually lower doses of the combined agents are sufficient to achieve the target blood pressure. The administration of antihypertensive agents in fixed combination has the advantage of its simplicity for both the physician as well as the patient. This aspect also explains the increasing popularity of fixed combinations as a valuable option in the initial treatment of the hypertensive patient.
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During the past twenty years, various instruments have been developed for the assessment of substance use in adolescents, mainly in the United States. However, few of them have been adapted to, and validated in, French-speaking populations. Consequently, although increasing alcohol and drug use among teenagers has become a major concern, the various health and social programs developed in response to this specific problem have received little attention with regard to follow-up and outcome assessment. A standardized multidimensional assessment instrument adapted for adolescents is needed to assess the individual needs of adolescents and assign them to the most appropriate treatment setting, to provide a single measurement within and across health and social systems, and to conduct treatment outcome evaluations. Moreover, having an available instrument makes it possible to develop longitudinal and trans-cultural research studies. For this reason, a French version of the Adolescent Drug Abuse Diagnosis (ADAD) was developed and validated at the University Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Clinic in Lausanne, Switzerland. This paper aims to discuss the methodological issues that we faced when using the ADAD instrument in a 4-year longitudinal study including adolescent substance users. Methodological aspects relating to the content and format of the instrument, the assessment administration and the statistical analyses are discussed.
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AIM: To assess whether repeating a grade was associated with drug use among adolescents after controlling for personal, family and school-related variables, and whether there were differences between students in mandatory and post-mandatory school. METHODS: Data were drawn from the Catalonia Adolescent Health Survey, a cross-sectional study of in-school adolescents aged 14-19 y. The index group included 366 subjects who were repeating a grade at the time the survey was carried out (old-for-grade, OFG). A control group matched by gender, school and being one grade ahead was randomly chosen among all the subjects who had never repeated a grade. All statistically significant variables in the bivariate analysis were included in a multivariate analysis. In a second step, all analyses were repeated for students in mandatory (14-16 y) and post-mandatory (17-19 y) school. RESULTS: After controlling for background variables, subjects in the index group were more likely to perceive that most of their peers were using synthetic drugs and to have ever used them, to have bad grades and a worse relationship with their teachers. OFG students in mandatory school were more likely to have divorced parents, bad grades and have ever used synthetic drugs, whereas they were less likely to be regular drinkers. OFG students in post-mandatory school were more likely to have below average grades, to be regular smokers and to perceive that most of their peers used synthetic drugs. CONCLUSIONS: When background variables are taken into consideration, the relationship between repeating a grade and drug use is not so clear. By increasing the familial and academic support of adolescents with academic underachievement, we could reduce their drug consumption.
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The development of orally active small molecule inhibitors of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) has led to new treatment options for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Patients with activating mutations of the EGFR gene show sensitivity to, and clinical benefit from, treatment with EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors (EGFR-TKls). First generation reversible ATP-competitive EGFR-TKls, gefitinib and erlotinib, are effective as first, second-line or maintenance therapy. Despite initial benefit, most patients develop resistance within a year, 50-60% of cases being related to the appearance of a T790M gatekeeper mutation. Newer, irreversible EGFR-TKls - afatinib and dacomitinib - covalently bind to and inhibit multiple receptors in the ErbB family (EGFR, HER2 and HER4). These agents have been mainly evaluated for first-line treatment but also in the setting of acquired resistance to first-generation EGFR-TKls. Afatinib is the first ErbB family blocker approved for patients with NSCLC with activating EGFR mutations; dacomitinib is in late stage clinical development. Mutant-selective EGFR inhibitors (AZD9291, CO-1686, HM61713) that specifically target the T790M resistance mutation are in early development. The EGFR-TKIs differ in their spectrum of target kinases, reversibility of binding to EGFR receptor, pharmacokinetics and potential for drug-drug interactions, as discussed in this review. For the clinician, these differences are relevant in the setting of polymedicated patients with NSCLC, as well as from the perspective of innovative anticancer drug combination strategies.
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Induction of drug-metabolizing enzymes (DMEs) is highly species-specific and can lead to drug-drug interaction and toxicities. In this series of studies we tested the species specificity of the antidiabetic drug development candidate and mixed peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR) alpha/gamma agonist (S)-4-O-tolylsulfanyl-2-(4-trifluormethyl-phenoxy)-butyric acid (EMD 392949, EMD) with regard to the induction of gene expression and activities of DMEs, their regulators, and typical PPAR target genes. EMD clearly induced PPARalpha target genes in rats in vivo and in rat hepatocytes but lacked significant induction of DMEs, except for cytochrome P450 (P450) 4A. CYP2C and CYP3A were consistently induced in livers of EMD-treated monkeys. Interestingly, classic rodent peroxisomal proliferation markers were induced in monkeys after 17 weeks but not after a 4-week treatment, a fact also observed in human hepatocytes after 72 h but not 24 h of EMD treatment. In human hepatocyte cultures, EMD showed similar gene expression profiles and induction of P450 activities as in monkeys, indicating that the monkey is predictive for human P450 induction by EMD. In addition, EMD induced a similar gene expression pattern as the PPARalpha agonist fenofibrate in primary rat and human hepatocyte cultures. In conclusion, these data showed an excellent correlation of in vivo data on DME gene expression and activity levels with results generated in hepatocyte monolayer cultures, enabling a solid estimation of human P450 induction. This study also clearly highlighted major differences between primates and rodents in the regulation of major inducible P450s, with evidence of CYP3A and CYP2C inducibility by PPARalpha agonists in monkeys and humans.