5 resultados para Peripheral blood cells
em Universidad del Rosario, Colombia
Resumo:
Introduction. Fractal geometry measures the irregularity of abstract and natural objects with the fractal dimension. Fractal calculations have been applied to the structures of the human body and to quantifications in physiology from the theory of dynamic systems.Material and Methods. The fractal dimensions were calculated, the number of occupation spaces in the space border of box counting and the area of two red blood cells groups, 7 normal ones, group A, and 7 abnormal, group B, coming from patient and of bags for transfusion, were calculated using the method of box counting and a software developed for such effect. The obtained measures were compared, looking for differences between normal and abnormal red blood cells, with the purpose of differentiating samples.Results. The abnormality characterizes by a number of squares of occupation of the fractal space greater or equal to 180; values of areas between 25.117 and 33.548 correspond to normality. In case that the evaluation according to the number of pictures is of normality, must be confirmed with the value of the area applied to adjacent red blood cells within the sample, that in case of having values by outside established and/or the greater or equal spaces to 180, they suggest abnormality of the sample.Conclusions. The developed methodology is effective to differentiate the red globules alterations and probably useful in the analysis of bags of transfusion for clinical use
Resumo:
Immunoregulatory cytokine interleukin-10 (IL-10) is elevated in sera from patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) correlating with disease activity. The established association of IL10 with SLE and other autoimmune diseases led us to fine map causal variant(s) and to explore underlying mechanisms. We assessed 19 tag SNPs, covering the IL10 gene cluster including IL19, IL20 and IL24, for association with SLE in 15,533 case and control subjects from four ancestries. The previously reported IL10 variant, rs3024505 located at 1 kb downstream of IL10, exhibited the strongest association signal and was confirmed for association with SLE in European American (EA) (P = 2.7×10−8, OR = 1.30), but not in non-EA ancestries. SNP imputation conducted in EA dataset identified three additional SLE-associated SNPs tagged by rs3024505 (rs3122605, rs3024493 and rs3024495 located at 9.2 kb upstream, intron 3 and 4 of IL10, respectively), and SLE-risk alleles of these SNPs were dose-dependently associated with elevated levels of IL10 mRNA in PBMCs and circulating IL-10 protein in SLE patients and controls. Using nuclear extracts of peripheral blood cells from SLE patients for electrophoretic mobility shift assays, we identified specific binding of transcription factor Elk-1 to oligodeoxynucleotides containing the risk (G) allele of rs3122605, suggesting rs3122605 as the most likely causal variant regulating IL10 expression. Elk-1 is known to be activated by phosphorylation and nuclear localization to induce transcription. Of interest, phosphorylated Elk-1 (p-Elk-1) detected only in nuclear extracts of SLE PBMCs appeared to increase with disease activity. Co-expression levels of p-Elk-1 and IL-10 were elevated in SLE T, B cells and monocytes, associated with increased disease activity in SLE B cells, and were best downregulated by ERK inhibitor. Taken together, our data suggest that preferential binding of activated Elk-1 to the IL10 rs3122605-G allele upregulates IL10 expression and confers increased risk for SLE in European Americans.
Resumo:
We previously reported that the G allele of rs3853839 at 3′untranslated region (UTR) of Toll-like receptor 7 (TLR7) was associated with elevated transcript expression and increased risk for systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) in 9,274 Eastern Asians [P = 6.5×10−10, odds ratio (OR) (95%CI) = 1.27 (1.17–1.36)]. Here, we conducted trans-ancestral fine-mapping in 13,339 subjects including European Americans, African Americans, and Amerindian/Hispanics and confirmed rs3853839 as the only variant within the TLR7-TLR8 region exhibiting consistent and independent association with SLE (Pmeta = 7.5×10−11, OR = 1.24 [1.18–1.34]). The risk G allele was associated with significantly increased levels of TLR7 mRNA and protein in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) and elevated luciferase activity of reporter gene in transfected cells. TLR7 3′UTR sequence bearing the non-risk C allele of rs3853839 matches a predicted binding site of microRNA-3148 (miR-3148), suggesting that this microRNA may regulate TLR7 expression. Indeed, miR-3148 levels were inversely correlated with TLR7 transcript levels in PBMCs from SLE patients and controls (R2 = 0.255, P = 0.001). Overexpression of miR-3148 in HEK-293 cells led to significant dose-dependent decrease in luciferase activity for construct driven by TLR7 3′UTR segment bearing the C allele (P = 0.0003). Compared with the G-allele construct, the C-allele construct showed greater than two-fold reduction of luciferase activity in the presence of miR-3148. Reduced modulation by miR-3148 conferred slower degradation of the risk G-allele containing TLR7 transcripts, resulting in elevated levels of gene products. These data establish rs3853839 of TLR7 as a shared risk variant of SLE in 22,613 subjects of Asian, EA, AA, and Amerindian/Hispanic ancestries (Pmeta = 2.0×10−19, OR = 1.25 [1.20–1.32]), which confers allelic effect on transcript turnover via differential binding to the epigenetic factor miR-3148.
Resumo:
El cáncer de mama en Colombia, es la tercera causa de muerte en la población en general y la segunda en mujeres. En el año 2002 el 40.5% de los casos se presentaron en mujeres menores de 50 años (Pardo, et al. 2003). El cáncer de mama resulta de múltiples factores, entre los que se incluyen cambios sucesivos en el genoma de células epiteliales originalmente normales, que pueden conducir a la activación de oncogenes, inactivación de genes supresores de tumor y pérdida de función de genes reparadores de daños al ADN. Estas alteraciones pueden también ser producto de anomalías cromosómicas tales como monosomías, trisomías, translocaciones, inversiones, pérdida de material genético y amplificaciones que también afectan la expresión de genes (1) (2) (3) (4). Sin embargo, el orden de aparición de los diferentes eventos no está completamente dilucidado. En este estudio se determinaron las anomalías cromosómicas y secuencias de ADN amplificadas en pacientes con cáncer de mama, tanto en muestras de sangre periférica como de tumor de mama de 30 pacientes. En las dos líneas celulares analizadas se observó una alta frecuencia de monosomías principalmente de los cromosomas X, 6, 7, 9, 17, 19 y 22. Hay una asociación entre las monosomías de los cromosomas 17 y 22 con el estado negativo para los receptores de estrógenos y progestágenos (p=0.027, p=0.050). También se encontró asociación entre la monosomía del cromosoma 19 con edad avanzada (p=0.034), observándose formas más agresivas de la enfermedad cuando ésta estuvo presente. Las monosomías fueron características de carcinomas ductales infiltrantes de todos los grados. En los demás tipos de carcinoma su frecuencia fue más baja. En el presente estudio se encontró una asociación significativa entre algunas anomalías cromosómicas y la enfermedad, no reportadas anteriormente, como fueron algunas monosomías, fragilidades y roturas cromosómicas y cromatídicas. La alta frecuencia de fragilidades encontradas tanto en sangre periférica (fra 9q12 p=0.001 y fra 3p14 p= 0.38) como de fragilidades expresadas espontáneamente (no inducidas por el uso de reactivos específicos) en muestras de tumor de mama (fra 1p11 p= 0.001, fra 2q11 p= 0.002), pueden ser el reflejo de una alta inestabilidad cromosómica en el genoma de estos pacientes, mostrando lautilidad de los estudios de fragilidad en la determinación de individuos en alto riesgo de desarrollar cáncer de mama. En ensayos de FISH no se observaron amplificaciones de los genes ERBb2 y c-myc en los pacientes analizados. Esto concuerda con lo encontrado en la literatura en donde se ha reportado, para este tipo de tumores, una sobre expresión de la proteína sin amplificación del gen, explicada por desregulación de la expresión del gen, a su vez posiblemente debida a mutaciones en la región promotora o a alteraciones, que conducen a un aumento de la tasa de transcripción (5) (6) (7). Los resultados obtenidos, aunque preliminares, aportan nuevos marcadores cromosómicos que pueden orientar el diagnóstico, pronóstico y tratamiento de esta patología.
Resumo:
Blood tissue is composed approximately in 45% by cells and its derivatives, with a life span of around 120 days for erythrocytes and 3 years for certain type of lymphocytes. This lost is compensated with the hematopoietic system activity and the presence of an immature primitive cell population known as Hematopoietic Stem Cells (HSCs) which perform the hematopoiesis, a process that is active from the beginning of the fetal life and produces near to 2 x 1011 eritrocytes and 1010 white blood cells per day (1). Hematopoietic Stem Cells are capable of both self-renewal and differentiation into multiple lineages, are located in a particular niche and are identified by their own cell surface markers, as the CD34 antigen. Recently it has been possible to advance in the understanding of self-renewal, differentiation and proliferation processes and in the involvement of the signaling pathways Hedgehog, Notch and Wnt. Studying the influence of these mechanisms on in vivo and in vitro behavior and the basic biology of HSCs, has given valuable tools for the generation of alternative therapies for hematologic disorders as leukemias.