2 resultados para Metabolic cycle
em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
Caves are dark and oligotrophic habitats where chemotrophic microbial communities interact with the inorganic mineral rocks and cooperate organizing themselves in complex biological formations, which are visible in caves as biofilms, biodeposits or biospeleothems. In these environments, microorganisms contribute to the turnover of the matter and activate peculiar enzymatic reactions leading to the modification of the mineral rocks and to the production of metabolites with possible industrial and pharmaceutical interest. In this PhD thesis, various molecular and geomicrobiological approaches were used to investigate the microbial diversity and potential activities in different cave systems, i.e. the orthoquartzite cave Imawarì Yeuta, the sufidic cave Fetida and the ice cave Cenote Abyss. This is aimed at gathering indications on the possible interactions that support microbial growth and its impact in cave environments. As a result, microbial taxa and functions associated to light-independent chemolithotroph and heterotrophic activities were identified in the three caves, indicating the involvement of microorganisms in i) silica mobilization and amorphization processes and the formation of a novel type of silica-based stromatolite in Imawarì Yeuta Cave, ii) the formation of three types of biofilm/biodeposit involved in sulphur cycle and in the speleogenesis of Fetida Cave, iii) the development of biofilms and their maintenance under psychrophilic conditions in samples collected from ice in Cenote Abyss. Additionally, the metabolic potentials of around one hundred isolates derived from these cave systems were evaluated in terms on anti-microbial activity. The results pointed out that unexplored and oligotrophic caves are promising environments for novel bioactive molecules discovery.
Resumo:
Background: Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is one of the deadliest and most aggressive form of primary brain tumor. Unfortunately, current GBM treatment therapies are not effective in treating GBM patients. They usually experience very poor prognosis with a median survival of approximately 12 months. Only 3-5% survive up to 3 years or more. A large-scale gene profile study revealed that several genes involved in essential cellular processes are altered in GBM, thus, explaining why existing therapies are not effective. The survival of GBM patients depends on understanding the molecular and key signaling events associated with these altered physiological processes in GBM. Phosphoinositides (PI) form just a tiny fraction of the total lipid content in humans, however they are implicated in almost all essential biological processes, such as acting as second messengers in spatio-temporal regulation of cell signaling, cytoskeletal reorganization, cell adhesion, migration, apoptosis, vesicular trafficking, differentiation, cell cycle and post-translational modifications. Interestingly, these essential processes are altered in GBM. More importantly, incoming reports have associated PI metabolism, which is mediated by several PI phosphatases such as SKIP, lipases such as PLCβ1, and other kinases, to regulate GBM associated cellular processes. Even as PLCβ1 and SKIP are involved in regulating aberrant cellular processes in several other cancers, very few studies, of which majority are in-silico-based, have focused on the impact of PLCβ1 and SKIP in GBM. Hence, it is important to employ clinical, in vitro, and in vivo GBM models to define the actual impact of PLCβ1 and SKIP in GBM. AIM: Since studies of PLCβ1 and SKIP in GBM are limited, this study aimed at determining the pathological impact of PI metabolic enzymes, PLCB1 and SKIP, in GBM patient samples, GBM cell line models, and xenograft models for SKIP. Results: For the first time, this study confirmed through qPCR that PLCβ1 gene expression is lower in human GBM patient samples. Moreover, PLCβ1 gene expression inversely correlates with pathological grades of glioma; it decreases as glioma grades increases or worsens. Silencing PLCβ1 in U87MG GBM cells produces a dual impact in GBM by participating in both pro-tumoral and anti-tumoral roles. PLCβ1 knockdown cells were observed to have more migratory abilities, increased cell to extracellular matrix (ECM) adhesion, transition from epithelial phenotype to mesenchymal phenotype through the upregulation of EMT transcription factors Twist1 and Slug, and mesenchymal marker, vimentin. On the other hand, p-Akt and p-mTOR protein expression were downregulated in PLCβ1 knockdown cells. Thus, the oncogenic pathway PI3K/Akt/mTOR pathway is inhibited during PLCβ1 knockdown. Consistently, cell viability in PLCβ1 knockdown cells were significantly decreased compared to controls. As for SKIP, this study demonstrated that about 48% of SKIP colocalizes with nuclear PtdIns(4,5)P2 to nuclear speckles and that SKIP knockdown alters nuclear PtdIns(4,5)P2 in a cell-type dependent manner. In addition, SKIP silencing increased tumor volume and weight in xenografts than controls by reducing apoptosis and increasing viability. All in all, these data confirm that PLCβ1 and SKIP are involved in GBM pathology and a complete understanding of their roles in GBM may be beneficial.