3 resultados para HC108.L9 M4
em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
Le Leucemie Acute Mieloidi di sottotipo FAB M4 e M5, le Leucemie Acute Linfoblastiche e le Leucemie Bifenotipiche sono frequentemente caratterizzate da traslocazioni del gene 11q23/MLL con formazione di oncogeni di fusione e produzione di oncoproteine che inducono la trasformazione neoplastica. Tali leucemie con riarrangiamenti di 11q23/MLL sono caratterizzate da prognosi infausta e scarsa responsività alle terapie convenzionali. Data la necessità di trovare terapie efficaci per le leucemie con traslocazione di MLL, in questo lavoro di ricerca sono stati progettati, caratterizzati e validati siRNA per il silenziamento genico degli oncogeni di fusione di MLL, con lo scopo di valutare il ripristino delle normali funzionalità di differenziamento cellulare e l’arresto della proliferazione neoplastica. Sono stati progettati siRNA specifici per gli oncogeni di fusione di MLL, sia per le regioni conservate nei diversi oncogeni di fusione, sia a livello del punto di fusione (breakpoint), sia per le regioni sui geni partner. I siRNA sono stati valutati su linee cellulari contenenti diverse traslocazioni del gene MLL. Il silenziamento è stato valutato sia a livello cellulare in termini di riduzione della capacità proliferativa e del numero delle cellule leucemiche, sia a livello molecolare tramite l’analisi della diminuzione dell’mRNA degli oncogeni di fusione di MLL. E’ stata valutata la diminuzione delle oncoproteine di fusione di MLL in seguito a trattamento con siRNA. E’ stata analizzata la variazione dell’espressione di geni dipendenti da MLL in seguito a trattamento con siRNA. Sono stati messi a punto modelli murini bioluminescenti di leucemie acute con traslocazioni di MLL innanzitutto per studiare il trafficking in vivo e la progressione leucemica delle leucemie acute con traslocazione di MLL. Successivamente sono stati utilizzati i modelli murini per lo studio in vivo dell’efficienza e della tossicità dei siRNA progettati e validati in vitro, valutando diversi sistemi di delivery per i siRNA in vivo.
Resumo:
Blue straggler stars (BSSs) are brighter and bluer (hotter) than the main-sequence (MS) turnoff and they are known to be more massive than MS stars.Two main scenarios for their formation have been proposed:collision-induced stellar mergers (COL-BSSs),or mass-transfer in binary systems (MT-BSSs).Depleted surface abundances of C and O are expected for MT-BSSs,whereas no chemical anomalies are predicted for COL-BSSs.Both MT- and COL-BSSs should rotate fast, but braking mechanisms may intervene with efficiencies and time-scales not well known yet,thus preventing a clear prediction of the expected rotational velocities.Within this context,an extensive survey is ongoing by using the multi-object spectrograph FLAMES@VLT,with the aim to obtain abundance patterns and rotational velocities for representative samples of BSSs in several Galactic GCs.A sub-population of CO-depleted BSSs has been identified in 47 Tuc,with only one fast rotating star detected.For this PhD Thesis work I analyzed FLAMES spectra of more than 130 BSSs in four GCs:M4,NGC 6397,M30 and ω Centauri.This is the largest sample of BSSs spectroscopically investigated so far.Hints of CO depletion have been observed in only 4-5 cases (in M30 and ω Centauri),suggesting either that the majority of BSSs have a collisional origin,or that the CO-depletion is a transient phenomenon.Unfortunately,no conclusions in terms of formation mechanism could be drawn in a large number of cases,because of the effects of radiative levitation. Remarkably,however,this is the first time that evidence of radiative levitation is found in BSSs hotter than 8200 K.Finally, we also discovered the largest fractions of fast rotating BSSs ever observed in any GCs:40% in M4 and 30% in ω Centauri.While not solving the problem of BSS formation,these results provide invaluable information about the BSS physical properties,which is crucial to build realistic models of their evolution.
Resumo:
This thesis reports an integrated analytical and physicochemical approach for the study of natural substances and new drugs based on mass spectrometry techniques combined with liquid chromatography. In particular, Chapter 1 concerns the study of Berberine a natural substance with pharmacological activity for the treatment of hepatobiliary and intestinal diseases. The first part focused on the relationships between physicochemical properties, pharmacokinetics and metabolism of Berberine and its metabolites. For this purpose a sensitive HPLC-ES-MS/MS method have been developed, validated and used to determine these compounds during their physicochemical properties studies and plasma levels of berberine and its metabolites including berberrubine(M1), demethylenberberine(M3), and jatrorrhizine(M4) in humans. Data show that M1, could have an efficient intestinal absorption by passive diffusion due to a keto-enol tautomerism confirmed by NMR studies and its higher plasma concentration. In the second part of Chapter 1, a comparison between M1 and BBR in vivo biodistribution in rat has been studied. In Chapter 2 a new HPLC-ES-MS/MS method for the simultaneous determination and quantification of glucosinolates, as glucoraphanin, glucoerucin and sinigrin, and isothiocyanates, as sulforaphane and erucin, has developed and validated. This method has been used for the analysis of functional foods enriched with vegetable extracts. Chapter 3 focused on a physicochemical study of the interaction between the bile acid sequestrants used in the treatment of hypercholesterolemia including colesevelam and cholestyramine with obeticolic acid (OCA), potent agonist of nuclear receptor farnesoid X (FXR). In particular, a new experimental model for the determination of equilibrium binding isotherm was developed. Chapter 4 focused on methodological aspects of new hard ionization coupled with liquid chromatography (Direct-EI-UHPLC-MS) not yet commercially available and potentially useful for qualitative analysis and for “transparent” molecules to soft ionization techniques. This method was applied to the analysis of several steroid derivatives.