34 resultados para IMMORTAL POLYMERIZATION
em Université de Lausanne, Switzerland
Design of a Control Slide for Cyanoacrylate Polymerization : Application to the CA-Bluestar Sequence
Resumo:
Casework expercience has shown that, in some cases, long exposures of surfaces subjected to cyanoacrylate (CA) fuming had detrimental effects on the subsequent application of Bluestar. This study aimed to develop a control mechanism to monitor the amount of CA deposited prior to the subsequent treatment. A control slide bearing spots of sodium hydroxide (NaOH) of known concentrations and volume was designed and validated against both scanning electron microscopy (SEM) observations and latent print examiners' assessments of the quality of the developed marks. The control slide allows one to define three levels of development that were used to monitor the Bluestar reaction on depleting footwear marks left in diluted blood. The appropriate conditions for a successful application of both CA and Bluestar were determined.
Resumo:
Bcl10 plays an essential role in the adaptive immune response, because Bcl10-deficient lymphocytes show impaired Ag receptor-induced NF-kappaB activation and cytokine production. Bcl10 is a phosphoprotein, but the physiological relevance of this posttranslational modification remains poorly defined. In this study, we report that Bcl10 is rapidly phosphorylated upon activation of human T cells by PMA/ionomycin- or anti-CD3 treatment, and identify Ser(138) as a key residue necessary for Bcl10 phosphorylation. We also show that a phosphorylation-deficient Ser(138)/Ala mutant specifically inhibits TCR-induced actin polymerization yet does not affect NF-kappaB activation. Moreover, silencing of Bcl10, but not of caspase recruitment domain-containing MAGUK protein-1 (Carma1) induces a clear defect in TCR-induced F-actin formation, cell spreading, and conjugate formation. Remarkably, Bcl10 silencing also impairs FcgammaR-induced actin polymerization and phagocytosis in human monocytes. These results point to a key role of Bcl10 in F-actin-dependent immune responses of T cells and monocytes/macrophages.
Resumo:
OBJECTIVES: Tissue engineering methods can be applied to regenerate diseased, or congenitally missing, urinary tract tissues. Urinary tract tissue cell cultures must be established in vitro and adequate matrices, acting as cell carriers, must be developed. Although degradable and nondegradable polymer matrices offer adequate mechanical stability, they are not optimal for cell adherence and growth. To overcome this problem, extracellular matrix proteins, permitting cell adhesion and regulation of cell proliferation and differentiation, can be adsorbed to the surface-modified polymer. METHODS: In this study, nondegradable polymer films, poly(ethylene terephthalate), were used as an experimental model. Films were modified by graft polymerization of acrylic acid to subsequently allow collagen type I and III immobilization. The following adhesion, proliferation of human urothelial cells, and induction of their stratification were analyzed. RESULTS: Collagen adsorption on 0.2 microg/cm2 poly(acrylic acid)-grafted polymer films rendered the matrix apt for human urothelial cell adhesion and proliferation. Furthermore, stratification of urothelial cells was demonstrated on these surface-modified matrices. CONCLUSIONS: These results have shown that surface-modified polymer matrices can be used to act as cell carriers for cultured human urothelial cells. Such a cell-matrix construct could be applied in reparative surgery of the urinary tract.
Resumo:
Sequence analysis reveals that the Bacillus subtilis 168 tuaABCDEFGH operon encodes enzymes required for the polymerization of teichuronic acid as well as for the synthesis of one of its precursors, the UDP-glucuronate. Mutants deficient in any of the tua genes, grown in batch cultures under conditions of phosphate limitation, were characterized by reduced amounts of uronate in their cell walls. The teichuronic acid operon belongs to the Pho regulon, as phosphate limitation induces its transcription. Placing the tuaABCDEFGH operon under the control of the inducible Pspac promoter allowed its constitutive expression independently of the phosphate concentration in the medium; the level of uronic acid in cell walls was dependent on the concentration of the inducer. Apparently, owing to an interdependence between teichoic and teichuronic acid incorporation into the cell wall, in examined growth conditions, the balance between the two polymers is maintained in order to insure a constant level of the wall negative charge.
Resumo:
It is likely that during this century polymers based on renewable materials will gradually replace industrial polymers based on petrochemicals. This chapter gives an overview of the current status of research on plant biopolymers that are used as a material in non-food applications. We cover technical and scientific bottlenecks in the production of novel or improved materials, and the potential of using transgenic or alternative crops in overcoming these bottlenecks. Four classes of biopolymers will be discussed: starch, proteins, natural rubber, and poly-beta-hydroxyalkanoates. Renewable polymers produced by chemical polymerization of monomers derived from sugars, vegetable oil, or proteins, are not considered here.
Resumo:
The role of the Saccharomyces cerevisae peroxisomal acyl-coenzyme A (acyl-CoA) thioesterase (Pte1p) in fatty acid beta-oxidation was studied by analyzing the in vitro kinetic activity of the purified protein as well as by measuring the carbon flux through the beta-oxidation cycle in vivo using the synthesis of peroxisomal polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA) from the polymerization of the 3-hydroxyacyl-CoAs as a marker. The amount of PHA synthesized from the degradation of 10-cis-heptadecenoic, tridecanoic, undecanoic, or nonanoic acids was equivalent or slightly reduced in the pte1Delta strain compared with wild type. In contrast, a strong reduction in PHA synthesized from heptanoic acid and 8-methyl-nonanoic acid was observed for the pte1Delta strain compared with wild type. The poor catabolism of 8-methyl-nonanoic acid via beta-oxidation in pte1Delta negatively impacted the degradation of 10-cis-heptadecenoic acid and reduced the ability of the cells to efficiently grow in medium containing such fatty acids. An increase in the proportion of the short chain 3-hydroxyacid monomers was observed in PHA synthesized in pte1Delta cells grown on a variety of fatty acids, indicating a reduction in the metabolism of short chain acyl-CoAs in these cells. A purified histidine-tagged Pte1p showed high activity toward short and medium chain length acyl-CoAs, including butyryl-CoA, decanoyl-CoA and 8-methyl-nonanoyl-CoA. The kinetic parameters measured for the purified Pte1p fit well with the implication of this enzyme in the efficient metabolism of short straight and branched chain fatty acyl-CoAs by the beta-oxidation cycle.
Resumo:
The degradation of fatty acids having cis- or trans-unsaturated bond at an even carbon was analyzed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by monitoring polyhydroxyalkanoate production in the peroxisome. Polyhydroxyalkanaote is synthesized by the polymerization of the beta-oxidation intermediates 3-hydroxy-acyl-CoAs via a bacterial polyhydroxyalkanoate synthase targeted to the peroxisome. The synthesis of polyhydroxyalkanoate in cells grown in media containing 10-cis-heptadecenoic acid was dependent on the presence of 2,4-dienoyl-CoA reductase activity as well as on Delta3,Delta2-enoyl-CoA isomerase activity. The synthesis of polyhydroxyalkanoate from 10-trans-heptadecenoic acid in mutants devoid of 2,4-dienoyl-CoA reductase revealed degradation of the trans fatty acid directly via the enoyl-CoA hydratase II activity of the multifunctional enzyme (MFE), although the level of polyhydroxyalkanoate was 10-25% to that of wild type cells. Polyhydroxyalkanoate produced from 10-trans-heptadecenoic acid in wild type cells showed substantial carbon flux through both a reductase-dependent and a direct MFE-dependent pathway. Flux through beta-oxidation was more severely reduced in mutants devoid of Delta3,Delta2-enoyl-CoA isomerase compared to mutants devoid of 2,4-dienoyl-CoA reductase. It is concluded that the intermediate 2-trans,4-trans-dienoyl-CoA is metabolized in vivo in yeast by both the enoyl-CoA hydratase II activity of the multifunctional protein and the 2,4-dienoyl-CoA reductase, and that the synthesis of the intermediate 3-trans-enoyl-CoA in the absence of the Delta3,Delta2-enoyl-CoA isomerase leads to the blockage of the direct MFE-dependent pathway in vivo.
Resumo:
A gene, named AtECH2, has been identified in Arabidopsis thaliana to encode a monofunctional peroxisomal enoyl-CoA hydratase 2. Homologues of AtECH2 are present in several angiosperms belonging to the Monocotyledon and Dicotyledon classes, as well as in a gymnosperm. In vitro enzyme assays demonstrated that AtECH2 catalyzed the reversible conversion of 2E-enoyl-CoA to 3R-hydroxyacyl-CoA. AtECH2 was also demonstrated to have enoyl-CoA hydratase 2 activity in an in vivo assay relying on the synthesis of polyhydroxyalkanoate from the polymerization of 3R-hydroxyacyl-CoA in the peroxisomes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. AtECH2 contained a peroxisome targeting signal at the C-terminal end, was addressed to the peroxisome in S. cerevisiae, and a fusion protein between AtECH2 and a fluorescent protein was targeted to peroxisomes in onion cells. AtECH2 gene expression was strongest in tissues with high beta-oxidation activity, such as germinating seedlings and senescing leaves. The contribution of AtECH2 to the degradation of unsaturated fatty acids was assessed by analyzing the carbon flux through the beta-oxidation cycle in plants that synthesize peroxisomal polyhydroxyalkanoate and that were over- or underexpressing the AtECH2 gene. These studies revealed that AtECH2 participates in vivo to the conversion of the intermediate 3R-hydroxyacyl-CoA, generated by the metabolism of fatty acids with a cis (Z)-unsaturated bond on an even-numbered carbon, to the 2E-enoyl-CoA for further degradation through the core beta-oxidation cycle.
Resumo:
A luminescent bacterial biosensor was used to quantify bioavailable arsenic in artificial groundwater. Its light production above the background emission was proportional to the arsenite concentration in the toxicologically relevant range of 0 to 0.5 mu M. Effects of the inorganic solutes phosphate, Fe(II) and silicate on the biosensor signal were studied. Phosphate at a concentration of 0.25 g L-1 phosphate slightly stimulated the light emission, but much less than toxicologically relevant concentrations of the much stronger inducer arsenite. No effect of phosphate was oberved in the presence of arsenite. Freshly prepared sodium silicate solution at a concentration of 10 g L-1 Si reduced the arsenite-induced light production by roughly 37%, which can be explained by transient polymerization leading to sequestration of some arsenic. After three days of incubation, silicate did not have this effect anymore, probably because depolymerization occurred. In the presence of 0.4 g L-1 Fe(II), the arsenite-induced light emission was reduced by up to 90%, probably due to iron oxidation followed by arsenite adsorption on the less soluble Fe(III) possibly along with some oxidation to the stronger adsorbing As(V). Addition of 100 mu M EDTA was capable of releasing all arsenic from the precipitate and to transform it into the biologically measurable, dissolved state. The biosensor also proved valuable for monitoring the effectiveness of an arsenic removal procedure based on water filtration through a mixture of sand and iron granules.
Resumo:
In vascular plants, the endodermis establishes a protective diffusion barrier surrounding the vasculature preventing the passive, uncontrolled entry of nutrients absorbed by the plant. It does so by means of a differentiation feature, the "Casparian Strip" (CS), a highly localized cell wall impregnation made of lignin, which seals the extracellular space. Although the existence of this differentiation feature has been intensively described, the mechanisms establishing this hallmark remain obscure. In this work I report, the developmental sequence of events that leads to a differentiated endodermis, in the plant model Arabidopsis thaliana. In addition, my descriptive approach gave important insights as to how these cells define membrane domains involved in the directional transport of nutrients. I also participated in characterizing a new transmembrane protein family, the CASPs, localized to the membrane domain underlying the CS, which we accordingly named the Casparian Strip membrane Domain (CSD). Our molecular analysis indicates that these proteins drive CS establishment. To identify more molecular factors of CS establishment, I performed a forward genetic screen. This screen led to the identification of 11 endodermis permissive mutants, which we named schengen (sgn) mutants. The causative mutations have been mapped to 5 independent loci: SGN1 to SGN5. SGN1 and SGN3 encode Receptor Like Kinases involved in the correct establishment of the CSD. A lack of those kinases leads to an incomplete CSD, which gives rise to interrupted CS barriers. Interestingly, SGN1 seems to also regulate CSD positioning to the middle of endodermal transversal walls. SGN4 encodes an NADPH oxidase involved in lignin polymerization essential for CS formation. The sgn5 mutant induces extra divisions of cortical cells strongly affecting the cell identity, but also leading to incorrect differentiation. A thorough characterization of the sgn2 mutant will follow elsewhere, yet preliminary results indicate that SGN2 encodes an Acyl-CoA N-acyltransferase. . In summary, with my work I have contributed a first set of molecular players of Casparian strip formation and initiated their characterization. Eventually, this might lead to an understanding of the molecular mechanisms of CS establishment in A.thaliana . This in turn will hopefully help to better understand nutrient uptake in higher plants and their response to environmental stresses. - Au sein des plantes vasculaires, l'endoderme représente un tissu protecteur mettant en place une barrière imperméable, empêchant n'importe quel élément de rejoindre les tissus conducteurs par simple diffusion. Cette barrière, appelée « Cadre de Caspary », correspond à une lignification de la paroi de l'endoderme et donne lieu à un cloisonnement de l'espace intercellulaire. Bien que cet élément de différenciation soit décrit en détail, sa mise en place reste incomprise. Cette étude indique la suite d'événements aboutissant à l'établissement du cadre de Caspary chez la plante modèle Arabidopsis thaliana. De plus, ce travail apporte de nouvelles connaissances expliquant comment ces cellules définissent des domaines membranaires importants pour le transport des nutriments. Nous décrivons une nouvelle famille de protéines membranaires, les CASPs (« CAparian Strip membrane domain Proteins »), localisées dans un domaine membranaire longeant le cadre de Caspary : le domaine de Caspary (CSD). L'analyse moléculaire des CASPs indique qu'elles dirigent la formation du cadre de Caspary. Par ailleurs, une approche génétique directe nous a permis d'identifier 11 mutants ayant un endoderme perméable. Nous avons nommé ces mutants Schengen, en référence à la zone de libre échange européenne. Les mutations impliquées dans ces mutants affectent 5 gènes désignés de SGN1 à SGN5. SGN1 et SGN3 produisent des protéines de type kinases (« Receptor-like Kinases », RLK) qui participent à la délimitation du CSD. L'absence de ces kinases aboutit à un domaine CSD incomplet, se traduisant par un cadre de Caspary discontinu. De plus, SGN1 semble réguler le positionnement du CSD au milieu de la paroi transversale de l'endoderme. SGN4 produit une enzyme de type NADPH oxydase impliquée dans la polymérisation du cadre de Caspary. Dans le mutant sgn5, on observe une division anormale des cellules du cortex créant ainsi une nouvelle couche cellulaire incapable d'achever sa différenciation en endoderme. Quant à la mutation sgn2, bien que nous pensons qu'elle affecte une Acyl-CoA N-acyltransferase, sa caractérisation ne sera réalisée que prochainement. Au final, ce travail procure de nouveaux éléments sur l'établissement du cadre de Caspary qui pourraient être importants afin de comprendre comment les plantes sélectionnent leurs nutriments et résistent à des conditions environnementales parfois hostiles. - De par leur immobilité, les plantes terrestres n'ont pas d'autre choix que de puiser leurs ressources dans leur environnement direct. La plante extrait du sol les nutriments qui lui sont nécessaires et les redistribue grâce à des tissus conducteurs. Afin de ne pas s'intoxiquer, il est donc essentiel de pouvoir sélectionner les éléments entrant dans la racine. Etonnement, ce n'est pas la surface des racines qui permet ce contrôle mais un tissu interne appelé endoderme. Ce dernier forme une barrière imperméable qui entoure chaque cellule et crée une jointure permettant de bloquer le passage des éléments entre les cellules. Cette structure, appelée « cadre de Caspary », oblige les éléments à entrer dans les cellules de l'endoderme et à être ainsi sélectionnés. Bien que cette structure soit décrite en détail, sa mise en place reste incomprise. Cette étude indique la suite d'événements qui aboutit à la formation du cadre de Caspary chez la plante modèle Arabidopsis thaliana. Ce travail apporte également de nouvelles connaissances expliquant comment ces cellules définissent, organisent et dirigent le transport des nutriments. Nous décrivons comment certains éléments de la cellule, les protéines CASPs (CAsparian Strip membrane domain Proteins), sont organisées un domaine particulier des membranes afin de créer une plateforme de construction longeant le cadre de Caspary : le domaine de Caspary (CSD). Afin de déterminer ce qu'il se passerait si une plante ne possédait pas de cadre de Caspary, nous avons réalisé une mutagénèse, ou approche génétique directe, et identifié 11 mutants (individu ayant un gène défectueux conduisant à la perte d'une fonction) ayant un endoderme perméable. Nous avons nommé ces mutants schengen, en référence à la zone de libre échange européenne. Les mutations impliquées dans ces mutants affectent 5 gènes désignés de SGN1 à SGN5. Les gènes SGN1 et SGN3 produisent des protéines de type kinases (« Receptor-like Kinases », RLK) servant à l'établissement de la plateforme de construction. L'absence de ces kinases aboutit à une base incomplète, se traduisant par un cadre de Caspary discontinu. Qui plus est, la kinase SGN1 semble réguler le positionnement de la plateforme au milieu de l'endoderme. Le gène SGN4 est par contre, impliqué dans la construction à proprement dite du cadre de Caspary. Dans le mutant sgn5, on observe une nouvelle couche de cellules ressemblant à de l'endoderme mais incapable de former correctement une barrière identique au cadre de Caspary. Quant au dernier mutant, sgn2, bien que cette étude fournisse des indices permettant de comprendre pourquoi le mutant sgn2 est défectueux, nous n'expliquerons ce cas que prochainement. En résumé, ce travail procure de nouvelles connaissances sur l'établissement du cadre de Caspary qui pourraient être importantes afin de comprendre comment les plantes sélectionnent leurs nutriments et résistent à des conditions environnementales parfois hostiles.
Resumo:
High-resolution structural information on optimally preserved bacterial cells can be obtained with cryo-electron microscopy of vitreous sections. With the help of this technique, the existence of a periplasmic space between the plasma membrane and the thick peptidoglycan layer of the gram-positive bacteria Bacillus subtilis and Staphylococcus aureus was recently shown. This raises questions about the mode of polymerization of peptidoglycan. In the present study, we report the structure of the cell envelope of three gram-positive bacteria (B. subtilis, Streptococcus gordonii, and Enterococcus gallinarum). In the three cases, a previously undescribed granular layer adjacent to the plasma membrane is found in the periplasmic space. In order to better understand how nascent peptidoglycan is incorporated into the mature peptidoglycan, we investigated cellular regions known to represent the sites of cell wall production. Each of these sites possesses a specific structure. We propose a hypothetic model of peptidoglycan polymerization that accommodates these differences: peptidoglycan precursors could be exported from the cytoplasm to the periplasmic space, where they could diffuse until they would interact with the interface between the granular layer and the thick peptidoglycan layer. They could then polymerize with mature peptidoglycan. We report cytoplasmic structures at the E. gallinarum septum that could be interpreted as cytoskeletal elements driving cell division (FtsZ ring). Although immunoelectron microscopy and fluorescence microscopy studies have demonstrated the septal and cytoplasmic localization of FtsZ, direct visualization of in situ FtsZ filaments has not been obtained in any electron microscopy study of fixed and dehydrated bacteria.
Resumo:
The evolution of senescence (the physiological decline of organisms with age) poses an apparent paradox because it represents a failure of natural selection to increase the survival and reproductive performance of organisms. The paradox can be resolved if natural selection becomes less effective with age, because the death of postreproductive individuals should have diminished effects on Darwinian fitness [1, 2]. A substantial body of empirical work is consistent with this prediction for animals, which transmit their genes to progeny via an immortal germline. However, such evidence is still lacking in plants, which lack a germline and whose reproduction is diffuse and modular across the soma. Here, we provide experimental evidence for a genetic basis of senescence in the short-lived perennial plant Silene latifolia. Our pedigree-based analysis revealed a marked increase with age in the additive genetic variance of traits closely associated with fitness. This result thus extends to plants the quantitative genetic support for the evolutionary theory of senescence.
Resumo:
Cell division in Gram-negative bacteria involves the co-ordinated invagination of the three cell envelope layers to form two new daughter cell poles. This complex process starts with the polymerization of the tubulin-like protein FtsZ into a Z-ring at mid-cell, which drives cytokinesis and recruits numerous other proteins to the division site. These proteins are involved in Z-ring constriction, inner- and outer-membrane invagination, peptidoglycan remodelling and daughter cell separation. Three papers in this issue of Molecular Microbiology, from the teams of Lucy Shapiro, Martin Thanbichler and Christine Jacobs-Wagner, describe a novel protein, called DipM for Division Involved Protein with LysM domains, that is required for cell division in Caulobacter crescentus. DipM localizes to the mid-cell during cell division, where it is necessary for the hydrolysis of the septal peptidoglycan to remodel the cell wall. Loss of DipM results in severe defects in cell envelope constriction, which is deleterious under fast-growth conditions. State-of-the-art microscopy experiments reveal that the peptidoglycan is thicker and that the cell wall is incorrectly organized in DipM-depleted cells compared with wild-type cells, demonstrating that DipM is essential for reorganizing the cell wall at the division site, for envelope invagination and cell separation in Caulobacter.
Resumo:
Plants naturally produce the lipid-derived polyester cutin, which is found in the plant cuticle that is deposited at the outermost extracellular matrix of the epidermis covering nearly all aboveground tissues. Being at the interface between the cell and the external environment, cutin and the cuticle play important roles in the protection of plants from several stresses. A number of enzymes involved in the synthesis of cutin monomers have recently been identified, including several P450s and one acyl-CoA synthetase, thus representing the first steps toward the understanding of polyester formation and, potentially, polyester engineering to improve the tolerance of plants to stresses, such as drought, and for industrial applications. However, numerous processes underlying cutin synthesis, such as a controlled polymerization, still remain elusive. Suberin is a second polyester found in the extracellular matrix, most often synthesized in root tissues and during secondary growth. Similar to cutin, the function of suberin is to seal off the respective tissue to inhibit water loss and contribute to resistance to pathogen attack. Being the main constituent of cork, suberin is a plant polyester that has already been industrially exploited. Genetic engineering may be worth exploring in order to change the polyester properties for either different applications or to increase cork production in other species. Polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs) are attractive polyesters of 3-hydroxyacids because of their properties as bioplastics and elastomers. Although PHAs are naturally found in a wide variety of bacteria, biotechnology has aimed at producing these polymers in plants as a source of cheap and renewable biodegradable plastics. Synthesis of PHA containing various monomers has been demonstrated in the cytosol, plastids, and peroxisomes of plants. Several biochemical pathways have been modified in order to achieve this, including the isoprenoid pathway, the fatty acid biosynthetic pathway, and the fatty acid β-oxidation pathway. PHA synthesis has been demonstrated in a number of plants, including monocots and dicots, and up to 40% PHA per gram dry weight has been demonstrated in Arabidopsis thaliana. Despite some successes, production of PHA in crop plants remains a challenging project. PHA synthesis at high level in vegetative tissues, such as leaves, is associated with chlorosis and reduced growth. The challenge for the future is to succeed in synthesis of PHA copolymers with a narrow range of monomer compositions, at levels that do not compromise plant productivity. This goal will undoubtedly require a deeper understanding of plant biochemical pathways and how carbon fluxes through these pathways can be manipulated, areas where plant "omics" can bring very valuable contributions.
Resumo:
Like most somatic human cells, T lymphocytes have a limited replicative life span. This phenomenon, called senescence, presents a serious barrier to clinical applications that require large numbers of Ag-specific T cells such as adoptive transfer therapy. Ectopic expression of hTERT, the human catalytic subunit of the enzyme telomerase, permits fibroblasts and endothelial cells to avoid senescence and to become immortal. In an attempt to immortalize normal human CD8(+) T lymphocytes, we infected bulk cultures or clones of these cells with a retrovirus transducing an hTERT cDNA clone. More than 90% of transduced cells expressed the transgene, and the cell populations contained high levels of telomerase activity. Measuring the content of total telomere repeats in individual cells (by flowFISH) we found that ectopic hTERT expression reversed the gradual loss of telomeric DNA observed in control populations during long term culture. Telomere length in transduced cells reached the levels observed in freshly isolated normal CD8(+) lymphocytes. Nevertheless, all hTERT-transduced populations stopped to divide at the same time as nontransduced or vector-transduced control cells. When kept in IL-2 the arrested cells remained alive. Our results indicate that hTERT may be required but is not sufficient to immortalize human T lymphocytes.