3 resultados para Pathology, clinical

em DigitalCommons@The Texas Medical Center


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Trehalose dimycolate (TDM) is a mycobacterial glycolipid that is released from the surface of virulent M. tuberculosis. We evaluated the rate of growth, colony characteristics and production of TDM by Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains isolated from different clinical sites. Since detergent removes TDM from organisms, we analyzed growth rate and colony morphology of 79 primary clinical isolates grown as pellicles on the surface of detergent free Middlebrook 7H9 media. The genotype of each had been previously characterized. TDM production was measured by thin layer chromatography on 32 of these isolates. We found that strains isolated from pulmonary sites produced large amounts of TDM, grew rapidly as thin spreading pellicles, showed early cording (<1 week) and climbed the sides of the dish. In contrast, the extrapulmonary isolates (lymph node and bone marrow) produced less TDM (p<0.01), grew as discrete patches with little tendency to spread or climb the walls (p<0.02). The Beijing pulmonary (BP) isolates produced more TDM than non Beijing pulmonary isolates. The largest differences were observed in Beijing strains. The Beijing pulmonary isolates produced more TDM and grew faster than the Beijing extrapulmonary isolates (p<0.01). This was true even when the pulmonary and extrapulmonary isolates were derived from the same clade. These growth characteristics were consistently observed only on the first passage after primary isolation. This suggests that the differences in growth rate and TDM production observed reflect differences in gene expression patterns of pulmonary and extrapulmonary infections, that Mycobacterium tuberculosis in the lung grows more rapidly and produces more TDM than it does in extrapulmonary sites. This provides new opportunities to investigate gene expression of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in human.^

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Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is an aggressive, high grade brain tumor. Microarray studies have shown a subset of GBMs with a mesenchymal gene signature. This subset is associated with poor clinical outcome and resistance to treatment. To establish the molecular drivers of this mesenchymal transition, we correlated transcription factor expression to the mesenchymal signature and identified transcriptional co-activator with PDZ-binding motif (TAZ) to be highly associated with the mesenchymal shift. High TAZ expression correlated with worse clinical outcome and higher grade. These data led to the hypothesis that TAZ is critical to the mesenchymal transition and aggressive clinical behavior seen in GBM. We investigated the expression of TAZ, its binding partner TEAD, and the mesenchymal marker FN1 in human gliomas. Western analyses demonstrated increased expression of TAZ, TEAD4, and FN1 in GBM relative to lower grade gliomas. We also identified CpG islands in the TAZ promoter that are methylated in most lower grade gliomas, but not in GBMs. TAZ-methylated glioma stem cell (GSC) lines treated with a demethylation agent showed an increase in mRNA and protein TAZ expression; therefore, methylation may be another novel way TAZ is regulated since TAZ is epigenetically silenced in tumors with a better clinical outcome. To further characterize the role of TAZ in gliomagenesis, we stably silenced or over-expressed TAZ in GSCs. Silencing of TAZ decreased invasion, self-renewal, mesenchymal protein expression, and tumor-initiating capacity. Over-expression of TAZ led to an increase in invasion, mesenchymal protein expression, mesenchymal differentiation, and tumor-initiating ability. These actions are dependent on TAZ interacting with TEAD since all these effects were abrogated with TAZ could not bind to TEAD. We also show that TAZ and TEAD directly bind to mesenchymal gene promoters. Thus, TAZ-TEAD interaction is critically important in the mesenchymal shift and in the aggressive clinical behavior of GBM. We identified TAZ as a regulator of the mesenchymal transition in gliomas. TAZ could be used as a biomarker to both estimate prognosis and stratify patients into clinically relevant subgroups. Since mesenchymal transition is correlated to tumor aggressiveness, strategies to target and inhibit TAZ-TEAD and the downstream gene targets may be warranted in alternative treatment.

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“This account of pathology in the Houston and Galveston area … examines important themes in the development of pathology in this area, using selected details from the careers of individuals and institutions to illustrate how pathologists, as practitioners, teachers, and researchers, dealt with the challenges they faced in finding and keeping a niche for pathology in the medical world.” - Preface This book was written to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Houston Society of Clinical Pathologists. Bibliographic references and other resources are included.