3 resultados para Early Animal Evolution

em DigitalCommons@The Texas Medical Center


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Inhibition of local host immune reactions is one mechanism contributing to tumor progression. To determine if alterations in local immune functioning occur during colon carcinogenesis, a model mucosal immune response, type I hypersensitivity against the intestinal parasite Trichinella spiralis, was first characterized in normal mice and then examined during experimental colon carcinogenesis. Segments of sensitized colon mounted in Ussing chambers and challenged with T. spiralis-derived antigen resulted in a rise in short-circuit current ($\rm\Delta I\sb{sc}$) that was antigen-specific and inhibited by furosemide, implicating epithelial Cl$\sp-$ secretion as the ionic mechanism. The immune-regulated Cl$\sp-$ secretion by colonic epithelial cells required the presence of mast cells with surface IgE. Inhibition of potential anaphylactic mediators with various pharmacological agents in vitro implicated prostaglandins and leukotrienes as the principal mediators of the antigen-induced $\rm\Delta I\sb{sc}$, with 5-hydroxytryptamine also playing a role. Distal colon from immune mice fed an aspirin-containing diet (800 mg/kg powdered diet) ad libitum for 6 wk had a decreased response to antigen, confirming the major role of prostaglandins in generating the colonic I$\sb{\rm sc}$. To determine the effects of early stages of colon carcinogenesis on this mucosal immune response, mice were immunized with T. spiralis 1 day after or 8 wk prior to the first of 6 weekly injections of the procarcinogen 1,2-dimethylhydrazine (DMH). Responsiveness to antigenic challenge was suppressed in the distal colon 4-6 wk after the final injection of DMH. One injection of DMH was not sufficient to inhibit antigen responsiveness. The colonic epithelium remained sensitive to direct stimulation by exogenous Cl$\sp-$ secretagogues. Decreased antigen-induced $\rm\Delta I\sb{sc}$ in the distal colon was not due to systemic immune suppression by DMH, as the proximal colon and jejunum maintained responsiveness to antigen. Also, rejection of a secondary T. spiralis infection from the small intestine was not altered. Tumors eventually developed 25-30 wk after the final injection of DMH only in the distal portions of the colon. These results suggest that early stages of DMH-induced colon carcinogenesis manipulate the microenvironment such that mucosal immune function, as measured by immune-regulated Cl$\sp-$ secretion, is suppressed in the distal colon, but not in other regions of the gut. Future elucidation of the mechanisms by which this localized inhibition of immune-mediated ion transport occurs may provide possible clues to the microenvironmental changes necessary for tumor progression in the distal colon. ^

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Estrogens have been implicated in the normal and neoplastic development of the mammary gland. Although estradiol is essential for early mammary differentiation, its role in postnatal ductal morphogenesis is poorly defined. We have found that neonatal estradiol exposure promotes precocious ductal outgrowth and terminal end bud formation in 21 day-old female mice. In contrast to this precocious phenotype, day 21 estradiol-treated epithelium, transplanted into control host fatpads, grows more slowly than control epithelium. Western and immunohistochemical (IHC) analyses indicate that neonatally-estrogenized glands have significantly less total ER than controls at days 7 and 21, and significantly more stromal ER at day 35. Estrogen receptor α (ER) is present in the gland when treatment is initiated at day 1. We propose that the premature activation of ER by neonatal estradiol exposure, during this critical perinatal period, is a key factor in the alteration of mammary growth and ER expression. ^ To address the role of ER function in mammary morphogenesis, we have developed an in vitro system to study the effect of estradiol exposure in vivo. Keratin and ER-positive mammary epithelial cell lines from 7, 21 and 35 day-old oil or estradiol treated mice have been established. Cell lines derived from estradiol-treated mice grow significantly slower than cells from control glands. Although the level of ER expressed by each cell line is correlated to its rate of growth, epithelial growth in vitro is estradiol-independent and antiestrogen-insensitive. Estradiol-induced transcription from an ERE-reporter in transiently-transfected cell lines confirms the functionality of the ER detected by western and IHC. However, there are no differences in estradiol-stimulated transcription between cell lines. ^ In conclusion, neonatal estradiol treatment alters the pattern of ER expression in mammary epithelial and stromal cells in vivo, and the growth of mammary epithelial cells in vivo and in vitro. When grown outside of the estrogenized host, exposed epithelium grows more slowly than the control. Therefore, an extra-epithelial factor is necessary for enhanced epithelial growth. Our model, which couples an in vivo-in vitro approach, can be used in the future to identify factors involved in the period of early mammary outgrowth and carcinogen susceptibility. ^

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The basis for the recent transition of Enterococcus faecium from a primarily commensal organism to one of the leading causes of hospital-acquired infections in the United States is not yet understood. To address this, the first part of my project assessed isolates from early outbreaks in the USA and South America using sequence analysis, colony hybridizations, and minimal inhibitory concentrations (MICs) which showed clinical isolates possess virulence and antibiotic resistance determinants that are less abundant or lacking in community isolates. I also revealed that the level of ampicillin resistance increased over time in clinical strains. By sequencing the pbp5 gene, I demonstrated an ~5% difference in the pbp5 gene between strains with MICs <4ug/ml and those with MICs >4µg/ml, but no specific sequence changes correlated with increases in MICs within the latter group. A 3-10% nucleotide difference was also seen in three other genes analyzed, which suggested the existence of two distinct subpopulations of E. faecium. This led to the second part of my project analyzing concatenated core gene sequences, SNPs, the 16S rRNA, and phylogenetics of 21 E. faecium genomes confirming two distinct clades; a community-associated (CA) clade and hospital-associated (HA) clade. Molecular clock calculations indicate that these two clades likely diverged ~ 300,000 to > 1 million years ago, long before the modern antibiotic era. Genomic analysis also showed that, in addition to core genomic differences, HA E. faecium harbor specific accessory genetic elements that may confer selection advantages over CA E. faecium. The third part of my project discovered 6 E. faecium genes with the newly identified “WxL” domain. My analyses, using RT-PCR, western blots, patient sera, whole-cell ELISA, and immunogold electron microscopy, indicated that E. faecium WxL genes exist in operons, encode bacterial cell surface localized proteins, that WxL proteins are antigenic in humans, and are more exposed on the surface of clinical isolates versus community isolates (even though they are ubiquitous in both clades). ELISAs and BIAcore analyses also showed that proteins encoded by these operons bind several different host extracellular matrix proteins, as well as to each other, suggesting a novel cell-surface complex. In summary, my studies provide new insights into the evolution of E. faecium by showing that there are two distantly related clades; one being more successful in the hospital setting. My studies also identified operons encoding WxL proteins whose characteristics could also contribute to colonization and virulence within this species.