233 resultados para Structural modifications
em Université de Lausanne, Switzerland
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TCRep 3D is an automated systematic approach for TCR-peptide-MHC class I structure prediction, based on homology and ab initio modeling. It has been considerably generalized from former studies to be applicable to large repertoires of TCR. First, the location of the complementary determining regions of the target sequences are automatically identified by a sequence alignment strategy against a database of TCR Vα and Vβ chains. A structure-based alignment ensures automated identification of CDR3 loops. The CDR are then modeled in the environment of the complex, in an ab initio approach based on a simulated annealing protocol. During this step, dihedral restraints are applied to drive the CDR1 and CDR2 loops towards their canonical conformations, described by Al-Lazikani et. al. We developed a new automated algorithm that determines additional restraints to iteratively converge towards TCR conformations making frequent hydrogen bonds with the pMHC. We demonstrated that our approach outperforms popular scoring methods (Anolea, Dope and Modeller) in predicting relevant CDR conformations. Finally, this modeling approach has been successfully applied to experimentally determined sequences of TCR that recognize the NY-ESO-1 cancer testis antigen. This analysis revealed a mechanism of selection of TCR through the presence of a single conserved amino acid in all CDR3β sequences. The important structural modifications predicted in silico and the associated dramatic loss of experimental binding affinity upon mutation of this amino acid show the good correspondence between the predicted structures and their biological activities. To our knowledge, this is the first systematic approach that was developed for large TCR repertoire structural modeling.
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Brown adipose tissue and liver of hibernating, arousing and euthermic individuals of the dormouse Muscardinus avellanarius were studies using ultrastructural cytochemistry and immunocytochemistry with the aim to investigate possible fine structural modifications of the cell nucleus during the seasonal cycle. The general morphology of brown adipocyte and hepatocyte nuclei was similar in the three experimental groups. However, three nuclear structural constituents were identified only in hibernating individuals: coiled bodies (CBs) and amorphous bodies (ABs) were observed in hepatocytes and, together with bundles of nucleoplasmic fibrils (NF), were present in brown adipocytes of hibernating dormice. In arousing animals only some structural constituents suggestive of poorly structured CBs were found. The latter showed the same immunocytochemical features as CBs of hibernating individuals, suggesting that they are disappearing CBs. A possible involvement of CBs in storing and/or processing RNA which must be rapidly and abundantly released upon arousal is discussed. ABs similarly to CBs contain RNA and nucleoplasmic ribonucleoproteins (RNPs) and could also be involved in mRNA pathways. NF do not contain nucleic acids or RNPs and seem to be composed of protein-aceous material; their functional role in the nuclear metabolism of hibernating brown adipocytes remains unclear.
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RESUME : Bien que les propriétés physiques de la structure de l'ADN aient été intensivement étudiées pendant plus de 50 ans il y a encore beaucoup de questions importantes qui attendent des réponses. Par exemple, qu'arrive-t-il à la structure de la double hélice d'ADN nue (sans protéines liées) lorsqu'elle est fortement courbée, de la même manière que dans les nucléosomes? Cet ADN nu est-il facilement plié (il reste dans le régime élastique) ou réduit-il la contrainte de flexion en formant des sites hyperflexibles «kinks» (il sort du régime élastique en cassant l'empilement des paires de bases à certains endroits) ? La microscopie électronique peut fournir une réponse à cette question par visualisation directe des minicercles d'ADN de la longueur d'un tour de nucléosome (environ 90 paires de bases). Pour que la réponse soit scientifiquement valide, on doit observer les molécules d'ADN lorsqu'elles sont en suspension dans la solution d'intérêt et sans que des colorations, produits chimiques ou fixatifs n'aient été ajoutés, étant donné que ceux-ci peuvent changer les propriétés de l'ADN. La technique de la cryo-microscopie électronique (cryo-EM) développée par le groupe de Jacques Dubochet au début des années 80, permet la visualisation directe des molécules d'ADN suspendues dans des couche minces vitrifiées de solutions aqueuses. Toutefois, le faible contraste qui caractérise la cryo-EM combinée avec la très petite taille des minicercles d'ADN rendent nécessaire l'optimisation de plusieurs étapes, aussi bien dans la préparation des échantillons que dans le processus d'acquisition d'images afin d'obtenir deux clichés stéréo qui permettent la reconstruction 3-D des minicercles d'ADN. Dans la première partie de ma thèse, je décris l'optimisation de certains paramètres pour la cryoEM et des processus d'acquisition d'image utilisant comme objets de test des plasmides et d'autres molécules d'ADN. Dans la deuxième partie, je .décris comment j'ai construit les minicercles d'ADN de 94 bp et comment j'ai introduit des modifications structurelles comme des coupures ou des lacunes. Dans la troisième partie, je décris l'analyse des reconstructions des rninicercles d'ADN. Cette analyse, appuyée par des tests biochimiques, indique fortement que des molécules d'ADN sont capables de former de petites molécules circulaires de 94 bp sans dépasser les limites d'élasticité, indiquant que les minicercles adoptent une forme circulaire régulière où la flexion est redistribuée le long la molécule. ABSTRACT : Although physical properties of DNA structure have been intensively studied for over 50 years there are still many important questions that need to be answered. For example, what happens to protein-free double-stranded DNA when it is strongly bent, as in DNA forming nucleosomes? Is such protein-free DNA smoothly bent (i.e. it remains within elastic limits of DNA rigidity) or does it release its bending stress by forming sharp kinks (i.e. it exits the elastic regime and breaks the stacking between neighbouring base-pairs in localized regions)? Electron microscopy can provide an answer to this question by directly visualizing DNA minicircles that have the size of nucleosome gyres (ca 90 bp). For the answer to be scientifically valid, one needs to observe DNA molecules while they are still suspended in the solution of interest and no staining chemicals or fixatives have been added since these can change the properties of the DNA. CryoEM techniques developed by Jacques Dubochet's group beginning in the 1980's permit direct visualization of DNA molecules suspended in cryo-vitrified layers of aqueous solutions. However, a relatively weak contrast of cryo-EM preparations combined with the very small size of the DNA minicircles made it necessary to optimize many of the steps and parameters of the cryo-EM specimen preparation and image acquisition processes in order to obtain stereo-pairs of images that permit the 3-D reconstruction of the observed DNA minicircles. In the first part of my thesis I describe the optimization of the cryo-EM preparation and the image acquisition processes using plasmid size DNA molecules as a test object. In the second part, I describe how I formed the 94 by DNA minicircles and how I introduced structural modifications like nicks or gaps. In the third part, I describe the cryo-EM analysis of the constructed DNA minicircles. That analysis, supported by biochemical tests, strongly indicates that DNA minicircles as small as 94 by remain within the elastic limits of DNA structure, i.e. the minicircles adopt a regular circular shape where bending is redistributed along the molecules.
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If the importance of triiodothyronine (T3) on brain development including myelinogenesis has long been recognized, its mechanism of action at the gene level is still not fully elucidated. We studied the effect of T3 on the expression of myelin protein genes in aggregating brain cell cultures. T3 increases the concentrations of mRNA transcribed from the following four myelin protein genes: myelin basic protein (Mbp), myelin-associated glycoprotein (Mag), proteolipid protein (Plp), and 2',3'-cyclic nucleotide 3'-phosphodiesterase (Cnp). T3 is not only a triggering signal for oligodendrocyte differentiation, but it has continuous stimulatory effects on myelin gene expression. Transcription in isolated nuclei experiments shows that T3 increases Mag and Cnp transcription rates. After inhibiting transcription with actinomycin D, we measured the half-lives of specific mRNAs. Our results show that T3 increases the stability of mRNA for myelin basic protein, and probably proteolipid protein. In vitro translation followed by myelin basic protein-specific immunoprecipitation showed a direct stimulatory effect of T3 on myelin basic protein mRNA translation. Moreover, this stimulation was higher when the mRNA was already stabilized in culture, indicating that stabilization is achieved through mRNA structural modifications. These results demonstrate the diverse and multiple mechanisms of T3 stimulation of myelin protein genes.
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In intestinal secretions, secretory IgA (SIgA) plays an important sentinel and protective role in the recognition and clearance of enteric pathogens. In addition to serving as a first line of defense, SIgA and SIgA x antigen immune complexes are selectively transported across Peyer's patches to underlying dendritic cells in the mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue, contributing to immune surveillance and immunomodulation. To explain the unexpected transport of immune complexes in face of the large excess of free SIgA in secretions, we postulated that SIgA experiences structural modifications upon antigen binding. To address this issue, we associated specific polymeric IgA and SIgA with antigens of various sizes and complexity (protein toxin, virus, bacterium). Compared with free antibody, we found modified sensitivity of the three antigens assayed after exposure to proteases from intestinal washes. Antigen binding further impacted on the immunoreactivity toward polyclonal antisera specific for the heavy and light chains of the antibody, as a function of the antigen size. These conformational changes promoted binding of the SIgA-based immune complex compared with the free antibody to cellular receptors (Fc alphaRI and polymeric immunoglobulin receptor) expressed on the surface of premyelocytic and epithelial cell lines. These data reveal that antigen recognition by SIgA triggers structural changes that confer to the antibody enhanced receptor binding properties. This identifies immune complexes as particular structural entities integrating the presence of bound antigens and adds to the known function of immune exclusion and mucus anchoring by SIgA.
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Résumé Le présent travail de thèse a fait face au défi de lier les changements transcriptionnels dans les neurones du système nerveux central au développement de l'addiction aux drogues. I1 est connu que l'apprentissage induit des modifications au niveau de la structure du cerveau, principalement en changeant la manière dont les neurones sont interconnectés par des synapses. De plus en plus d'évidences soutiennent un scénario selon lequel l'activité neuronale déclenche des cascades de signalisation intracellulaire qui ciblent des facteurs de transcription. Ces derniers peuvent activer la transcription de gènes spécifiques qui codent pour des protéines nécessaires au renforcement des synapses mémorisant ainsi la nouvelle information. Puisque l'addiction peut être considérée comme une forme aberrante d'apprentissage, et que les modifications synaptiques sont connues pour être impliquées dans le processus d'addiction, nous essayons de décrire des mécanismes transcriptionels étant à la base des changements synaptiques induits par les drogues. Comme modèle nous utilisons des cultures primaires des neurones de striatum, d'hippocampe et de cortex de souris ainsi que des tranches de cerveau de rat. Une des caractéristiques communes de quasiment toutes les substances addictives est de pouvoir activer le système mésolimbique dopaminergique provoquant la libération de dopamine sur les neurones du striatum (du noyau accumbens). Dans ce travail de thèse nous démontrons que dans des cultures du striatum, la dopamine induit le facteur de transcription C/EBPβ qui, à son tour, provoque l'expression du gène codant pour la substance P. Ce mécanisme pourrait potentiellement contribuer à la tolérance envers les drogues puisqu'il fait partie d'une rétroaction (feed-back) sur les cellules produisant la dopamine. Etant donné que ces résultats montrent l'importance de C/EBPβ dans la psychopathologie de l'addiction, nous avons également décidé d'étudier les mécanismes fondamentaux de l'activation de la transcription par C/EBPβ. Nos expériences démontrent que trois isoformes activatrices de la famille C/EBP recrutent le coactivateur CBP et provoquent en même temps sa phosphorylation. Enfin, nous montrons que les coactivateurs nommés TORC, nouvellement découverts et clonés, sont capables de détecter la coïncidence d'un signal cAMP et d'une entrée de calcium dans des neurones. Par conséquent les TORCs pourraient contribuer à détecter la coïncidence d'un signal glutamate et d'un signal dopamine dans les neurones de striatum, ce qui pourrait être important pour associer les effets hédonistes de la drogue à l'information contextuelle (par exemple à l'environnement où la drogue a été consommée). Nous sommes les premiers à observer que les TORCs sont nécessaires pour la potentiation à long terme dans l'hippocampe. Summary The present thesis work faced the challenge to link the development of drug addiction to transcriptional changes in the neurons of the central nervous system. Experience and learning are known to induce structural modifications in the brain, and these changes are thought to occur mainly in the way neurons are interconnected by synapses. More and more evidences point to a scenario in which neuronal activity would activate signalization cascades that impinge on transcription factors, which, in turn, would activate genes necessary for the reinforcement of synapses coding for new informations. Given that drug addiction can be considered as an aberrant form of learning and is thought to involve synaptic modifications, we try to elucidate some of the transcriptional mechanisms that could underlie drug-induced synaptic changes. As a model system, we use primary cultures of striatal, cortical and hippocampal neurons dissected from mouse embryos as well as brain slices from rats. One of the common features of virtually all drugs of abuse is to activate the mesocorticolimbic dopaminergic system that results in the release of dopamine onto the neurons of the striatum (nucleus accumbens). In this thesis work we show that in striatal cultures, dopamine induces the transcription factor C/EBPβ that in turn drives the expression of the gene coding for substance P. This mechanism is likely to be important for the drug-induced tolerance in the brain since it might be a part of a feedback acting on dopaminergic neurons. Given the suspected importance of C/EBPβ in drug addiction, we also try to elucidate some aspects of the basic mechanisms by which the C/EBP family activates transcription. We show that three activating members of the C/EBP family recruit the coactivator CBP and trigger its phosphorylation. Finally, we demonstrate that the newly discovered and cloned transcriptional coactivators, named TORCs (transducers of regulated CREB activity) are able to detect the coincidence of a calcium and a cAMP signal in the central nervous system. This way, TORCs could contribute to the detection of a coincidence between a glutamate and a dopamine signal in striatal neurons - a process that is suggested to be important for an association between the rewarding effect of a drug and contextual information (such as the environment where the drug had been taken). We demonstrate that TORCs are required for hippocampal LTP.
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Copy number variants (CNVs) influence the expression of genes that map not only within the rearrangement, but also to its flanks. To assess the possible mechanism(s) underlying this "neighboring effect", we compared intrachromosomal interactions and histone modifications in cell lines of patients affected by genomic disorders and control individuals. Using chromosome conformation capture (4C-seq), we observed that a set of genes flanking the Williams-Beuren Syndrome critical region (WBSCR) were often looping together. The newly identified interacting genes include AUTS2, mutations of which are associated with autism and intellectual disabilities. Deletion of the WBSCR disrupts the expression of this group of flanking genes, as well as long-range interactions between them and the rearranged interval. We also pinpointed concomitant changes in histone modifications between samples. We conclude that large genomic rearrangements can lead to chromatin conformation changes that extend far away from the structural variant, thereby possibly modulating expression globally and modifying the phenotype. GEO SERIES ACCESSION NUMBER: GSE33784, GSE33867.
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From toddler to late teenager, the macroscopic pattern of axonal projections in the human brain remains largely unchanged while undergoing dramatic functional modifications that lead to network refinement. These functional modifications are mediated by increasing myelination and changes in axonal diameter and synaptic density, as well as changes in neurochemical mediators. Here we explore the contribution of white matter maturation to the development of connectivity between ages 2 and 18 y using high b-value diffusion MRI tractography and connectivity analysis. We measured changes in connection efficacy as the inverse of the average diffusivity along a fiber tract. We observed significant refinement in specific metrics of network topology, including a significant increase in node strength and efficiency along with a decrease in clustering. Major structural modules and hubs were in place by 2 y of age, and they continued to strengthen their profile during subsequent development. Recording resting-state functional MRI from a subset of subjects, we confirmed a positive correlation between structural and functional connectivity, and in addition observed that this relationship strengthened with age. Continuously increasing integration and decreasing segregation of structural connectivity with age suggests that network refinement mediated by white matter maturation promotes increased global efficiency. In addition, the strengthening of the correlation between structural and functional connectivity with age suggests that white matter connectivity in combination with other factors, such as differential modulation of axonal diameter and myelin thickness, that are partially captured by inverse average diffusivity, play an increasingly important role in creating brain-wide coherence and synchrony.
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Amino acids form the building blocks of all proteins. Naturally occurring amino acids are restricted to a few tens of sidechains, even when considering post-translational modifications and rare amino acids such as selenocysteine and pyrrolysine. However, the potential chemical diversity of amino acid sidechains is nearly infinite. Exploiting this diversity by using non-natural sidechains to expand the building blocks of proteins and peptides has recently found widespread applications in biochemistry, protein engineering and drug design. Despite these applications, there is currently no unified online bioinformatics resource for non-natural sidechains. With the SwissSidechain database (http://www.swisssidechain.ch), we offer a central and curated platform about non-natural sidechains for researchers in biochemistry, medicinal chemistry, protein engineering and molecular modeling. SwissSidechain provides biophysical, structural and molecular data for hundreds of commercially available non-natural amino acid sidechains, both in l- and d-configurations. The database can be easily browsed by sidechain names, families or physico-chemical properties. We also provide plugins to seamlessly insert non-natural sidechains into peptides and proteins using molecular visualization software, as well as topologies and parameters compatible with molecular mechanics software.
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PURPOSE: This study aimed to highlight structural corneal changes in a model of type 2 diabetes, using in vivo corneal confocal microscopy (CCM). The abnormalities were also characterized by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and second harmonic generation (SHG) microscopy in rat and human corneas. METHODS: Goto-Kakizaki (GK) rats were observed at age 12 weeks (n = 3) and 1 year (n = 6), and compared to age-matched controls. After in vivo CCM examination, TEM and SHG microscopy were used to characterize the ultrastructure and the three-dimensional organization of the abnormalities. Human corneas from diabetic (n = 3) and nondiabetic (n = 3) patients were also included in the study. RESULTS: In the basal epithelium of GK rats, CCM revealed focal hyper-reflective areas, and histology showed proliferative cells with irregular basement membrane. In the anterior stroma, extracellular matrix modifications were detected by CCM and confirmed in histology. In the Descemet's membrane periphery of all the diabetic corneas, hyper-reflective deposits were highlighted using CCM and characterized as long-spacing collagen fibrils by TEM. SHG microscopy revealed these deposits with high contrast, allowing specific detection in diabetic human and rat corneas without preparation and characterization of their three-dimensional organization. CONCLUSION: Pathologic findings were observed early in the development of diabetes in GK rats. Similar abnormalities have been found in corneas from diabetic patients. TRANSLATIONAL RELEVANCE: This multidisciplinary study highlights diabetes-induced corneal abnormalities in an animal model, but also in diabetic donors. This could constitute a potential early marker for diagnosis of hyperglycemia-induced tissue changes.
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Eukaryotic genomes are compartmentalized in different structural domains that can affect positively or negatively gene expression. These regions of euchromatin and heterochromatin are characterized by distinct histones marks which can facilitate or repress gene transcription. The chromatin environment represents thus one of the main problems to control gene expression in biotechnological applications or gene therapy, since its expression is affected by the chromatin neighboring its locus of insertion. Some chromatin regions like telomeres are composed of constitutive heterochromatin which leads to the telomeric position effect (TPE) that silences genes adjacent to the telomere. TPE is known to spread by the selfrecruitment of the SIR histone deacetylase complex from the telomere in S.cerevisiae, but the histone marks that are associated to telomeric chromatin in mammalian cells remain mostly unknown. The transcription factor CTF1 has shown antisilencing properties in mammalian cells and also a boundary activity against TPE in yeast cells when fused to the yeast Gal4 DNA binding domain. In the work presented here, we describe a dual-reporter system to assess the boundary activity of proteins such as CTF1 at human telomeres. When located between the two reporter genes, CTF1 shields the telomere distal gene from TPE, while the telomereproximal gene remains silenced by telomeric heterochromatin. The boundary activity of CTF1 is shown to act regardless its function of transcriptional activator, by opposition to the transcriptional activator VP16 which activates indifferently both transgenes. Moreover, this study shows that CTF1 boundary activity is linked to its H3 binding function, as expected from a chromatin remodeler. ChIP experiments showed that histone deacetylation is the main histone modification involved in gene silencing at mammalian cell telomeres. Distinctly to yeast cells, the histone deacetylation signal in human cells extented over a short range along the chromosome. CTF1 may help to block this propagation and therefore to restore histones acetylation level on telomere protected locus. Surprisingly, other histone marks such as trimethyl-H3K9 or trimethyl-H4K20 were found on telomere protected locus, while in another clone, unsilencing of telomere distal transgene was associated with recruitment of the histone variant H2A.Z. Thus, I conclude that CTF1 displays a chromatin boundary function which is independent of its transcriptional activity and therefore exhibit features required for use as chromatin insulator in biotechnological applications. RESUME Les génomes eucaryotes sont compartementalisés en domaines structurels qui peuvent affecter positivement ou négativement l'expression des gènes avoisinants. Ces régions dites d'euchromatine ou d'hétérochromatine sont caractérisées par des modifications posttraductionnelles des histones qui peuvent faciliter ou au contraire inhiber la transcription des gènes qui s'y trouvent. Ainsi, isoler un gène de son environnement chromatinien est problème fréquent lorsqu'il s'agit de contrôler son expression dans le cadre d'applications en biotechnologie ou encore en thérapie génique. Certaines régions de chromatine telles que les télomères sont composées d'hétérochromatine constitutive qui mène au silençage des gènes avoisinants. Cet effet de position télomérique (TPE) est connu dans la levure S.cerevisiae comme se propageant par auto-recrutement du complexe de déacétylation d'histone SIR, alors que peu de modifications de chromatine ont pu être associées à ce phénomène dans les cellules de mammifères. Le facteur de transcription CTF1 a montré des propriétés d'anti-silençage dans les cellules de mammifères, ainsi qu'une activité barrière contre le silençage télomérique dans les cellules de levures lorsqu'il est fusionné au domaine de liaison à l'ADN de la protéine de levure Gal4. Dans le travail présenté ci-après est décrit un système à deux gènes rapporteurs permettant de mesurer l'activité barrière de protéines telles que CTF1 aux télomères humains, et les modifications de chromatine qui y sont associées. Lorsque CTF1 est placé entre les deux gènes rapporteurs, le gène distant du télomère est protégé du silençage qui lui est associé, alors que le gène proche du télomère reste soumis à ce silençage induit par l'hétérochromatine télomérique. L'activité barrière de CTF1 est montrée ici comme agissant indépendamment de son activité transcriptionnelle, par opposition à l'activateur transcriptionnel VP16 qui active indifféremment les deux transgènes. En outre, cette étude appuie l'hypothèse stipulant que CTF1 agisse comme remodeleur chromatinien puisqu'elle démontre que son activité barrière est directement dépendante de son activité de liaison avec l'histone H3. De plus, des expériences d'immuno-précipitation de la chromatine démontrent que la déacétylation des histones est le majeur phénomène intervenant dans le silençage télomérique. Par opposition à la levure, ce signal de déacétylation ne se propage dans les cellules humaines que sur une courte distance le long du chromosome. CTF1 agit ainsi en bloquant cette propagation et en restaurant le niveau d'acétylation des histones sur le locus protégé du télomère. De manière surprenante et inattendue, d'autres modifications d'histones telles que 4 les H3K9 et H4K20 triméthylées sont aussi observées à ce locus, tandis le recrutement du variant H2A.Z peut aussi être suffisant à restaurer l'expression du gène distant du télomère. En terme de cette analyse, CTF1 exhibe ainsi une fonction de barrière chromatinienne qui exclue une activité transcriptionnelle non désirée - propriété qui est requise dans l'établissement des isolateurs visant à permettre le contrôle d'un transgène dans le cadre d'applications en biotechnologies.
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PURPOSE: To investigate choroidal vascular abnormalities in peripheral exudative hemorrhagic chorioretinopathy, using dynamic ultrawide-field fluorescein angiography (FA) and indocyanine green angiography (ICGA).¦DESIGN: Prospective observational case series.¦METHODS: This institutional study comprised a consecutive series of 40 patients (48 eyes) with peripheral exudative hemorrhagic chorioretinopathy. Choroidal vascular abnormalities were assessed with dynamic ultrawide-field (150-degree) FA and ICGA, using the Staurenghi 230 SLO Retina Lens and the Heidelberg scanning laser ophthalmoscope. The main outcome measures were morphologic descriptions of structural vascular abnormalities and choroidal hemodynamics (comparison with 30 normal eyes).¦RESULTS: The peripheral mass lesions were highly exudative and hemorrhagic, and usually associated with a pigment epithelium detachment. FA revealed nonspecific alterations corresponding to the visible fundoscopic changes (window defects, blockage, staining), but no neovascular membrane. However, despite frequent masking, ICGA showed hyperfluorescent polyp-like structures in the choroid of the lesion area in 33 eyes (69%) and an abnormal choroidal vascular network in 24 eyes (50%). The abnormal choroidal vascular network filled in the arterial or early venous phase, while the polyp-like structures filled some seconds later. Optical coherence tomography revealed the typical dome-shaped elevation of the pigment epithelium over the vascular polyps. Peripheral choriocapillaris closure was observed as well as dilated shunting vessels.¦CONCLUSION: Peripheral exudative hemorrhagic chorioretinopathy shares many characteristics (polyp-like choroidal telangiectases, abnormal choroidal vascular networks, exudative and hemorrhagic presentation) with polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy. Clarification of the precise role of these abnormalities requires further studies.
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Les approches multimodales dans l'imagerie cérébrale non invasive sont de plus en plus considérées comme un outil indispensable pour la compréhension des différents aspects de la structure et de la fonction cérébrale. Grâce aux progrès des techniques d'acquisition des images de Resonance Magnetique et aux nouveaux outils pour le traitement des données, il est désormais possible de mesurer plusieurs paramètres sensibles aux différentes caractéristiques des tissues cérébraux. Ces progrès permettent, par exemple, d'étudier les substrats anatomiques qui sont à la base des processus cognitifs ou de discerner au niveau purement structurel les phénomènes dégénératifs et développementaux. Cette thèse met en évidence l'importance de l'utilisation d'une approche multimodale pour étudier les différents aspects de la dynamique cérébrale grâce à l'application de cette approche à deux études cliniques: l'évaluation structurelle et fonctionnelle des effets aigus du cannabis fumé chez des consommateurs réguliers et occasionnels, et l'évaluation de l'intégrité de la substance grise et blanche chez des jeunes porteurs de la prémutations du gène FMR1 à risque de développer le FXTAS (Fragile-X Tremor Ataxia Syndrome). Nous avons montré que chez les fumeurs occasionnels de cannabis, même à faible concentration du principal composant psychoactif (THC) dans le sang, la performance lors d'une tâche visuo-motrice est fortement diminuée, et qu'il y a des changements dans l'activité des trois réseaux cérébraux impliqués dans les processus cognitifs: le réseau de saillance, le réseau du contrôle exécutif, et le réseau actif par défaut (Default Mode). Les sujets ne sont pas en mesure de saisir les saillances dans l'environnement et de focaliser leur attention sur la tâche. L'augmentation de la réponse hémodynamique dans le cortex cingulaire antérieur suggère une augmentation de l'activité introspective. Une investigation des ef¬fets au niveau cérébral d'une exposition prolongée au cannabis, montre des changements persistants de la substance grise dans les régions associées à la mémoire et au traitement des émotions. Le niveau d'atrophie dans ces structures corrèle avec la consommation de cannabis au cours des trois mois précédant l'étude. Dans la deuxième étude, nous démontrons des altérations structurelles des décennies avant l'apparition du syndrome FXTAS chez des sujets jeunes, asymptomatiques, et porteurs de la prémutation du gène FMR1. Les modifications trouvées peuvent être liées à deux mécanismes différents. Les altérations dans le réseau moteur du cervelet et dans la fimbria de l'hippocampe, suggèrent un effet développemental de la prémutation. Elles incluent aussi une atrophie de la substance grise du lobule VI du cervelet et l'altération des propriétés tissulaires de la substance blanche des projections afférentes correspondantes aux pédoncules cérébelleux moyens. Les lésions diffuses de la substance blanche cérébrale peu¬vent être un marquer précoce du développement de la maladie, car elles sont liées à un phénomène dégénératif qui précède l'apparition des symptômes du FXTAS. - Multimodal brain imaging is becoming a leading tool for understanding different aspects of brain structure and function. Thanks to the advances in Magnetic Resonance imaging (MRI) acquisition schemes and data processing techniques, it is now possible to measure different parameters sensitive to different tissue characteristics. This allows for example to investigate anatomical substrates underlying cognitive processing, or to disentangle, at a pure structural level degeneration and developmental processes. This thesis highlights the importance of using a multimodal approach for investigating different aspects of brain dynamics by applying this approach to two clinical studies: functional and structural assessment of the acute effects of cannabis smoking in regular and occasional users, and grey and white matter assessment in young FMR1 premutation carriers at risk of developing FXTAS. We demonstrate that in occasional smokers cannabis smoking, even at low concentration of the main psychoactive component (THC) in the blood, strongly decrease subjects' performance on a visuo-motor tracking task, and globally alters the activity of the three brain networks involved in cognitive processing: the Salience, the Control Executive, and the Default Mode networks. Subjects are unable to capture saliences in the environment and to orient attention to the task; the increase in Hemodynamic Response in the Anterior Cingulate Cortex suggests an increase in self-oriented mental activity. A further investigation on long term exposure to cannabis, shows a persistent grey matter modification in brain regions associated with memory and affective processing. The degree of atrophy in these structures also correlates with the estimation of drug use in the three months prior the participation to the study. In the second study we demonstrate structural changes in young asymptomatic premutation carriers decades before the onset of FXTAS that might be related to two different mechanisms. Alteration of the cerebellar motor network and of the hippocampal fimbria/ fornix, may reflect a potential neurodevelopmental effect of the premutation. These include grey matter atrophy in lobule VI and modification of white matter tissue property in the corresponding afferent projections through the Middle Cerebellar Peduncles. Diffuse hemispheric white matter lesions that seem to appear closer to the onset of FXTAS and be related to a neurodegenerative phenomenon may mark the imminent onset of FXTAS.
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A role for the gastro-intestinal tract in controlling bone remodeling is suspected since serum levels of bone remodeling markers are affected rapidly after a meal. Glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP) represents a suitable candidate in mediating this effect. The aim of the present study was to investigate the effect of total inhibition of GIP signaling on trabecular bone volume, microarchitecture and quality. We used GIP receptor (GIPR) knockout mice and investigated trabecular bone volume and microarchitecture by microCT and histomorphometry. GIPR-deficient animals at 16 weeks of age presented with a significant (20%) increase in trabecular bone mass accompanied by an increase (17%) in trabecular number. In addition, the number of osteoclasts and bone formation rate was significantly reduced and augmented, respectively in these animals when compared with wild-type littermates. These modifications of trabecular bone microarchitecture are linked to a remodeling in the expression pattern of adipokines in the GIPR-deficient mice. On the other hand, despite significant enhancement in bone volume, intrinsic mechanical properties of the bone matrix was reduced as well as the distribution of bone mineral density and the ratio of mature/immature collagen cross-links. Taken together, these results indicate an increase in trabecular bone volume in GIPR KO animals associated with a reduction in bone quality.
Resumo:
The first extensive catalog of structural human variation was recently released. It showed that large stretches of genomic DNA that vary considerably in copy number were extremely abundant. Thus it is conceivable that they play a major role in functional variation. Consistently, genomic insertions and deletions were shown to contribute to phenotypic differences by modifying not only the expression levels of genes within the aneuploid segments but also of normal copy-number neighboring genes. In this report, we review the possible mechanisms behind this latter effect.