3 resultados para POLYMORPHONUCLEAR LEUKOCYTES

em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna


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The dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) is a mammal that is adapted to life in a totally aquatic environment. Despite the popularity and even iconic status of the dolphin, our knowledge of its physiology, its unique adaptations and the effects on it of environmental stressors are limited. One approach to improve this limited understanding is the implementation of established cellular and molecular methods to provide sensitive and insightful information for dolphin biology. We initiated our studies with the analysis of wild dolphin peripheral blood leukocytes, which have the potential to be informative of the animal’s global immune status. Transcriptomic profiles from almost 200 individual samples were analyzed using a newly developed species-specific microarray to assess its value as a prognostic and diagnostic tool. Functional genomics analyses were informative of stress-induced gene expression profiles and also of geographical location specific transcriptomic signatures, determined by the interaction of genetic, disease and environmental factors. We have developed quantitative metrics to unambiguously characterize the phenotypic properties of dolphin cells in culture. These quantitative metrics can provide identifiable characteristics and baseline data which will enable identification of changes in the cells due to time in culture. We have also developed a novel protocol to isolate primary cultures from cryopreserved tissue of stranded marine mammals, establishing a tissue (and cell) biorepository, a new approach that can provide a solution to the limited availability of samples. The work presented represents the development and application of tools for the study of the biology, health and physiology of the dolphin, and establishes their relevance for future studies of the impact on the dolphin of environmental infection and stress.

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Circulating Fibrocytes (CFs) are bone marrow-derived mesenchymal progenitor cells that express a similar pattern of surface markers related to leukocytes, hematopoietic progenitor cells and fibroblasts. CFs precursor display an ability to differentiate into fibroblasts and Myofibroblasts, as well as adipocytes. Fibrocytes have been shown to contribute to tissue fibrosis in the end-stage renal disease (ESRD), as well as in other fibrotic diseases, leading to fibrogenic process in other organs including lung, cardiac, gut and liver. This evidence has been confirmed by several experimental proofs in mice models of kidney injury. In the present study, we developed a protocol for the study of CFs, by using peripheral blood monocytes cells (PBMCs) samples collected from healthy human volunteers. Thanks to a flow cytometry method, in vitro culture assays and the gene expression assays, we are able to study and characterize this CFs population. Moreover, results confirmed that these approaches are reliable and reproducible for the investigation of the circulating fibrocytes population in whole blood samples. Our final aim is to confirm the presence of a correlation between the renal fibrosis progression, and the different circulating fibrocyte levels in Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) patients. Thanks to a protocol study presented and accepted by the Ethic Committee we are continuing the study of CFs induction in a cohort of sixty patients affected by CKD, divided in three distinct groups for different glomerular filtration rate (GFR) levels, plus a control group of thirty healthy subjects. Ongoing experiments will determine whether circulating fibrocytes represent novel biomarkers for the study of CKD progression, in the early and late phases of this disease.

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Class I phosphatidylinositol 3-kinases (PI3Ks) are heterodimeric lipid kinases consisting of a regulatory subunit and one of four catalytic subunits (p110α, p110β, p110γ or p110δ). p110γ/p110δ PI3Ks are highly enriched in leukocytes. In general, PI3Ks regulate a variety of cellular processes including cell proliferation, survival and metabolism, by generating the second messenger phosphatidylinositol-3,4,5-trisphosphate (PtdIns(3,4,5)P3). Their activity is tightly regulated by the phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) lipid phosphatase. PI3Ks are widely implicated in human cancers, and in particular are upregulated in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL), mainly due to loss of PTEN function. These observations lend compelling weight to the application of PI3K inhibitors in the therapy of T-ALL. At present different compounds which target single or multiple PI3K isoforms have entered clinical trials. In the present research, it has been analyzed the therapeutic potential of the pan-PI3K inhibitor BKM120, an orally bioavailable 2,6-dimorpholino pyrimidine derivative, which has entered clinical trials for solid tumors, on both T-ALL cell lines and patient samples. BKM120 treatment resulted in cell cycle arrest and apoptosis, being cytotoxic to a panel of T-ALL cell lines and patient T-lymphoblasts. Remarkably, BKM120 synergized with chemotherapeutic agents currently used for treating T-ALL patients. BKM120 efficacy was confirmed in in vivo studies to a subcutaneous xenotransplant model of human T-ALL. Because it is still unclear which agents among isoform-specific or pan inhibitors can achieve the greater efficacy, further analyses have been conducted to investigate the effects of PI3K inhibition, in order to elucidate the mechanisms responsible for the proliferative impairment of T-ALL. Overall, these results indicated that BKM120 may be an efficient treatment for T-ALLs that have aberrant up-regulation of the PI3K signaling pathway and strongly support clinical application of pan-class I PI3K rather than single-isoform inhibitors in T-ALL treatment.