18 resultados para Metabolic-fate


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The molecular functions of the non-cell cycle-related Cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5) have been of primary interest within the neuroscience field, but novel undertakings are constantly emerging for the kinase in tissue homeostasis, as well as in diseases such as diabetes and cancer. Although Cdk5 activation is predominantly regulated by specific non-cyclin activator protein binding, additional mechanisms have proved to orchestrate Cdk5 signaling in cells. For example, the interaction between the intermediate filament protein nestin and Cdk5 has been proposed to determine cellular fate during neuronal apoptosis through nestin-dependent adjustment of the sensitive balance and turnover of Cdk5 activators. While nestin constitutes a crucial regulatory scaffold for appropriate Cdk5 activation in apoptosis, Cdk5 itself phosphorylates nestin with the consequence of filament reorganization in both neuronal progenitors and differentiating muscle cells. Interestingly, the two proteins are often found coexpressed in various tissues and cell types, proposing that nestin-mediated scaffolding of Cdk5 and its activators may be applicable to other tissue systems as well. In the literature, the molecular functions of nestin have remained in the shade, as it is mostly exploited as a marker protein for progenitor cells. In light of these studies, the aim of this thesis was to assess the importance of the nestin scaffold in regulation of Cdk5 actions in cell fate decisions. This thesis can be subdivided into two major projects: one that studied the nature of the Cdk5-nestin interplay in muscle, and one that assessed their role in prostate cancer. During differentiation of a myoblast cell line, the filament formation properties of nestin was found to be crucial in directing Cdk5 activity, with direct consequences on the process of differentiation. Also the genetic knockout of nestin was found to influence Cdk5 activity, although differentiation per se was not affected. Instead, the genetic ablation of nestin had broad consequences on muscle homeostasis and regeneration. While the nestin-mediated regulation of Cdk5 in muscle was found to act in multiple ways, the connection remained more elusive in cancer models. Cdk5 was, however, established as a significant determinant of prostate cancer proliferation; a behavior uncharacteristic for this differentiation-associated kinase. Through complex and simultaneous regulation of two major prostate cancer pathways, Cdk5 was placed upstream of both Akt kinase and the androgen receptor. Its action on proliferation was nonetheless mainly exerted through the Akt signaling pathway in various cancer models. In summary, this thesis contributed to the knowledge of Cdk5 regulation and functions in two atypical settings; proliferation (in a cancer framework) and muscle differentiation, which is a poorly understood model system in the Cdk5 field. This balance between proliferation and differentiation implemented by Cdk5 is ultimately regulated (where present) by the dynamics of the cytoskeletal nestin scaffold.

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Lysinuric protein intolerance (LPI) is a recessively inherited disorder characterised by reduced plasma and increased urinary levels of cationic amino acids (CAAs), protein malnutrition, growth failure and hyperlipidemia. Some patients develop severe immunological, renal and pulmonary complications. All Finnish patients share the same LPIFin mutation in the SLC7A7 gene that encodes CAA transporter y+LAT1. The aim of this study was to examine molecular factors contributing to the various symptoms, systemic metabolic and lipid profiles, and innate immune responses in LPI. The transcriptomes, metabolomes and lipidomes were analysed in whole-blood cells and plasma using RNA microarrays and gas or liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry techniques, respectively. Toll-like receptor (TLR) signalling in monocyte-derived macrophages exposed to pathogens was scrutinised using qRT-PCR and the Luminex technology. Altered levels of transcripts participating in amino acid transport, immune responses, apoptosis and pathways of hepatic and renal metabolism were identified in the LPI whole-blood cells. The patients had increased non-essential amino acid, triacylglycerol and fatty acid levels, and decreased plasma levels of phosphatidylcholines and practically all essential amino acids. In addition, elevated plasma levels of eight metabolites, long-chain triacylglycerols, two chemoattractant chemokines and nitric oxide correlated with the reduced glomerular function in the patients with kidney disease. Accordingly, it can be hypothesised that the patients have increased autophagy, inflammation, oxidative stress and apoptosis, leading to hepatic steatosis, uremic toxicity and altered intestinal microbe metabolism. Furthermore, the LPI macrophages showed disruption in the TLR2/1, TLR4 and TLR9 pathways, suggesting innate immune dysfunctions with an excessive response to bacterial infections but a deficient viral DNA response.

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Obesity and its co-morbidities, such as metabolic syndrome (MetS), non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and type 2 diabetes, have increased over the last few decades like an epidemic. So far the mechanisms of many metabolic diseases are not known in detail and currently there are not enough effective means to prevent and treat them. Several recent studies have shown that the unbalanced gut microbiota composition (GMC) and activity have an influence on the fat accumulation in the body. Further, it seems that the GMC of obese individuals differs from the lean. The aim of this study was to investigate whether there are differences between the GMC of metabolically impaired overweight/obese (MetS group), metabolically healthy overweight/obese and normal-weight individuals. In addition, the mechanisms by which the gut bacteria as well as their specific structures, such as flagellin (FLG) that stimulates the Toll-like receptor 5 (TLR5) affect metabolism, were investigated both in vivo and in vitro in human adipocytes and hepatocytes. The results of this study show that the abundance of certain gram-positive bacteria belonging to the Clostridial cluster XIV was higher in the MetS group subjects compared to their metabolically healthy overweight/obese and lean counterparts. Metabolically impaired subjects tended to also have a greater abundance of potentionally inflammatory Enterobacteria in their gut and thus seemed to have aberrant GMC. In addition, it was found that subjects with a high hepatic fat content (HHFC group) had less Faecalibacterium prausnitzii in their gut than individuals with low hepatic fat content. Further gene expression analysis revealed that the HHFC group also had increased inflammation cascades in their adipose tissue. Additionally, metabolically impaired individuals displayed an increased expression of FLG-recognizing TLR5 in adipose tissue, and the TLR5 expression levels associated positively both with liver fat content and insulin resistance in humans. These changes in the adipose tissue may further contribute to the impaired metabolism observed, such as insulin resistance and dyslipidemia. In vitro -studies showed that the FLG-induced TLR5 activation in adipocytes enhanced the hepatic fat accumulation by decreasing insulin signaling and mitochondrial functions and increasing triglyceride synthesis due to increased glycerol secretion from adipocytes. In conclusion, the findings of this study suggest that it may be possible that the novel prevention and personalized treatment strategies based on GM modulation will succesfully be developed for obesity and metabolic disorders in the future.