4 resultados para hypoxia, respiratory depression, central inhibition

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


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Le alterazioni della funzionalità mitocondriale detengono un ruolo cruciale nella patogenesi della malattia di Alzheimer (AD), sostenendo il processo neurodegenerativo attraverso meccanismi quali la riduzione della disponibilità energetica e la iperproduzione di ROS. Alle numerose ipotesi di patogenesi dell’AD, si è recentemente affiancata la cosiddetta ipotesi vascolare. Nei soggetti AD è stata riscontrata una significativa riduzione della disponibilità di ossigeno a livello neuronale (ipossia neuronale). Da numerosi studi è poi emerso che l’ipossia gioca un ruolo fondamentale nello sviluppo dell’AD contribuendo a più vie patogenetiche contemporaneamente. Tuttavia, non sono stati ancora chiariti tutti i meccanismi attraverso cui l’ipossia esplica la sua azione di danno. Lo scopo di questo studio è stato quello di contribuire a chiarire il ruolo patologico dell’ipossia nell’AD, analizzando principalmente le alterazioni della funzionalità mitocondriale indotte dalla riduzione della disponibilità di ossigeno. Nella prima fase dello studio cellule PC12 sono state coltivate in presenza di β-amiloide e ipossia. In questo modello abbiamo osservato un potenziamento dei fenomeni di deplezione dell’ATP e di generazione delle ROS indotti dalla Aβ quando anche l’ipossia era presente come fonte di danno cellulare, ipotizzando per i due fattori un effetto congiunto di tipo additivo. Nella seconda fase abbiamo esposto all’ipossia fibroblasti prelevati da pazienti AD portatori di mutazioni a carico dei geni APP e PSEN. La presenza di mutazioni predisponenti ad un fenotipo AD era in grado di determinare un danno bioenergetico e ossidativo. Le alterazioni bioenergetiche riscontrate in normossia risultavano ulteriormente potenziate quando i fibroblasti erano coltivati in ipossia, mentre lo stato di stress ossidativo veniva evidenziato solo in condizioni ipossiche. Sulla base dei risultati finora conseguiti si può ipotizzare che uno dei meccanismi attraverso cui l’ipossia esplica la sua azione di danno nella AD, possa essere dovuto alla capacità di potenziare ulteriormente le alterazioni della funzionalità mitocondriale.

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During recent years a consistent number of central nervous system (CNS) drugs have been approved and introduced on the market for the treatment of many psychiatric and neurological disorders, including psychosis, depression, Parkinson disease and epilepsy. Despite the great advancements obtained in the treatment of CNS diseases/disorders, partial response to therapy or treatment failure are frequent, at least in part due to poor compliance, but also genetic variability in the metabolism of psychotropic agents or polypharmacy, which may lead to sub-therapeutic or toxic plasma levels of the drugs, and finally inefficacy of the treatment or adverse/toxic effects. With the aim of improving the treatment, reducing toxic/side effects and patient hospitalisation, Therapeutic Drug Monitoring (TDM) is certainly useful, allowing for a personalisation of the therapy. Reliable analytical methods are required to determine the plasma levels of psychotropic drugs, which are often present at low concentrations (tens or hundreds of nanograms per millilitre). The present PhD Thesis has focused on the development of analytical methods for the determination of CNS drugs in biological fluids, including antidepressants (sertraline and duloxetine), antipsychotics (aripiprazole), antiepileptics (vigabatrin and topiramate) and antiparkinsons (pramipexole). Innovative methods based on liquid chromatography or capillary electrophoresis coupled to diode-array or laser-induced fluorescence detectors have been developed, together with the suitable sample pre-treatment for interference removal and fluorescent labelling in case of LIF detection. All methods have been validated according to official guidelines and applied to the analysis of real samples obtained from patients, resulting suitable for the TDM of psychotropic drugs.

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Hypoxia-inducible factor-1 alpha (HIF-1α) plays a critical role in survival and is associated with poor prognosis in solid tumors. The role of HIF-1α in multiple myeloma is not completely known. In the present study, we explored the effect of EZN2968, an locked nucleic acid antisense oligonucleotide against HIF-1α, as a molecular target in MM. A panel of MM cell lines and primary samples from MM patients were cultured in vitro in the presence of EZN2968 . Under normoxia culture condition, HIF-1α mRNA and protein expression was detectable in all MM cell lines and in CD138+ cells from newly diagnosed MM patients samples. Significant up-regulation of HIF-1α protein expression was observed after incubation with IL6 or IGF-I, confirming that HIF-1α can be further induced by biological stimuli. EZN2968 efficiently induces a selective and stable down-modulation of HIF-1α and decreased the secretion of VEGF released by MM cell. Treatment with EZN2968 gave rise to a progressive accumulation of cells in the S and subG0 phase. The analysis of p21, a cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors controlling cell cycle check point, shows upregulation of protein levels. These results suggest that HIF-1α inhibition is sufficient for cell cycle arrest in normoxia, and for inducing an apoptotic pathways.. In the presence of bone marrow microenvironment, HIF-1α inhibition blocks MAPK kinase pathway and secretion of pro-surviaval cytokines ( IL6,VEGF,IL8) In this study we provide evidence that HIF-1α, even in the absence of hypoxia signal, is expressed in MM plasma cells and further inducible by bone marrow milieu stimuli; moreover its inhibition is sufficient to induce a permanent cell cycle arrest. Our data support the hypothesis that HIF-1α inhibition may suppress tumor growth by preventing proliferation of plasma cells through p21 activation and blocking pro-survival stimuli from bone marrow microenvironment.

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Mitochondria have a central role in energy supply in cells, ROS production and apoptosis and have been implicated in several human disease and mitochondrial dysfunctions in hypoxia have been related with disorders like Type II Diabetes, Alzheimer Disease, inflammation, cancer and ischemia/reperfusion in heart. When oxygen availability becomes limiting in cells, mitochondrial functions are modulated to allow biologic adaptation. Cells exposed to a reduced oxygen concentration readily respond by adaptive mechanisms to maintain the physiological ATP/ADP ratio, essential for their functions and survival. In the beginning, the AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) pathway is activated, but the responsiveness to prolonged hypoxia requires the stimulation of hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs). In this work we report a study of the mitochondrial bioenergetics of primary cells exposed to a prolonged hypoxic period . To shine light on this issue we examined the bioenergetics of fibroblast mitochondria cultured in hypoxic atmospheres (1% O2) for 72 hours. Here we report on the mitochondrial organization in cells and on their contribution to the cellular energy state. Our results indicate that prolonged hypoxia cause a significant reduction of mitochondrial mass and of the quantity of the oxidative phosphorylation complexes. Hypoxia is also responsible to damage mitochondrial complexes as shown after normalization versus citrate synthase activity. HIF-1α plays a pivotal role in wound healing, and its expression in the multistage process of normal wound healing has been well characterized, it is necessary for cell motility, expression of angiogenic growth factor and recruitment of endothelial progenitor cells. We studied hypoxia in the pathological status of diabetes and complications of diabetes and we evaluated the combined effect of hyperglycemia and hypoxia on human dermal fibroblasts (HDFs) and human dermal micro-vascular endothelial cells (HDMECs) that were grown in high glucose, low glucose concentrations and mannitol as control for the osmotic challenge.