962 resultados para GROWTH-DIFFERENTIATION FACTOR-9
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Our aim was to evaluate the interaction between breast cancer cells and nodal fibroblasts, by means of their gene expression profile. Fibroblast primary cultures were established from negative and positive lymph nodes from breast cancer patients and a similar gene expression pattern was identified, following cell culture. Fibroblasts and breast cancer cells (MDA-MB231, MDA-MB435, and MCF7) were cultured alone or co-cultured separated by a porous membrane (which allows passage of soluble factors) for comparison. Each breast cancer lineage exerted a particular effect on fibroblasts viability and transcriptional profile. However, fibroblasts from positive and negative nodes had a parallel transcriptional behavior when co-cultured with a specific breast cancer cell line. The effects of nodal fibroblasts on breast cancer cells were also investigated. MDA MB-231 cells viability and migration were enhanced by the presence of fibroblasts and accordingly, MDA-MB435 and MCF7 cells viability followed a similar pattern. MDA-MB231 gene expression profile, as evaluated by cDNA microarray, was influenced by the fibroblasts presence, and HNMT, COMT, FN3K, and SOD2 were confirmed downregulated in MDA-MB231 co-cultured cells with fibroblasts from both negative and positive nodes, in a new series of RT-PCR assays. In summary, transcriptional changes induced in breast cancer cells by fibroblasts from positive as well as negative nodes are very much alike in a specific lineage. However, fibroblasts effects are distinct in each one of the breast cancer lineages, suggesting that the inter-relationships between stromal and malignant cells are dependent on the intrinsic subtype of the tumor.
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Objective. To investigate the expression of bone resorption regulators (receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa B [RANK], RANK ligand [RANKL], and osteoprotegerin [OPG]) in calcifying cystic odontogenic tumor (CCOT), adenomatoid odontogenic tumor (AOT), calcifying epithelial odontogenic tumor (CEOT), odontogenic myxoma (OM), and ameloblastic fibroma (AF). Study design. The expression of these mediators was evaluated by means of immunohistochemistry. Results. All specimens demonstrated positive immunoreactivity to RANK, RANKL, and OPG. The quantification of these mediators in epithelium revealed a similar pattern of expression for RANKL and OPG in CCOT, AOT, CEOT, and AF. With regard to stromal/mesenchymal cells, the majority of AOT and CCOT cases showed a higher content of OPG than RANKL, whereas CEOT, OM, and especially AF had a tendency to present a greater content of RANKL than OPG. Conclusion. Our data indicate that the CCOT, AOT, CEOT, OM, and AF cell constituents express key regulators of bone metabolism that might locally modulate tumor-associated bone resorption. (Oral Surg Oral Med Oral Pathol Oral Radiol Endod 2008;106:548-55)
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Trabalho de Projecto de natureza científica para obtenção do grau de Mestre em Engenharia Civil
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Dissertação de mestrado em Finanças
Uric acid is a danger signal activating NALP3 inflammasome in lung injury inflammation and fibrosis.
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RATIONALE: Lung injury leads to pulmonary inflammation and fibrosis through myeloid differentiation primary response gene 88 (MyD88) and the IL-1 receptor 1 (IL-1R1) signaling pathway. The molecular mechanisms by which lung injury triggers IL-1beta production, inflammation, and fibrosis remain poorly understood. OBJECTIVES: To determine if lung injury depends on the NALP3 inflammasome and if bleomycin (BLM)-induced lung injury triggers local production of uric acid, thereby activating the NALP3 inflammasome in the lung. Methods: Inflammation upon BLM administration was evaluated in vivo in inflammasome-deficient mice. Pulmonary uric acid accumulation, inflammation, and fibrosis were analyzed in mice treated with the inhibitor of uric acid synthesis or with uricase, which degrades uric acid. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Lung injury depends on the NALP3 inflammasome, which is triggered by uric acid locally produced in the lung upon BLM-induced DNA damage and degradation. Reduction of uric acid levels using the inhibitor of uric acid synthesis allopurinol or uricase leads to a decrease in BLM-induced IL-1beta production, lung inflammation, repair, and fibrosis. Local administration of exogenous uric acid crystals recapitulates lung inflammation and repair, which depend on the NALP3 inflammasome, MyD88, and IL-1R1 pathways and Toll-like receptor (TLR)2 and TLR4 for optimal inflammation but are independent of the IL-18 receptor. CONCLUSIONS: Uric acid released from injured cells constitutes a major endogenous danger signal that activates the NALP3 inflammasome, leading to IL-1beta production. Reducing uric acid tissue levels represents a novel therapeutic approach to control IL-1beta production and chronic inflammatory lung pathology.
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AIMS: A hallmark of Fabry disease is the concomitant development of left-ventricular hypertrophy and arterial intima-media thickening, the pathogenesis of which is thought to be related to the presence of a plasmatic circulating growth-promoting factor. We therefore characterized the plasma of patients with Fabry disease in order to identify this factor. METHODS AND RESULTS: Using a classical biochemical strategy, we isolated and identified sphingosine-1 phosphate (S1P) as a proliferative factor present in the plasma of patients with Fabry disease. Plasma S1P levels were significantly higher in 17 patients with Fabry disease compared with 17 healthy controls (225 +/- 40 vs. 164 +/- 17 ng/mL; P = 0.005). There was a positive correlation between plasma S1P levels and both common carotid artery intima-media thickness and left-ventricular mass index (r(2) = 0.47; P = 0.006 and r(2) = 0.53; P = 0.0007, respectively). In an experimental model, mice treated with S1P developed cardiovascular remodelling similar to that observed in patients with Fabry disease. CONCLUSION: Sphingosine-1 phosphate participates in cardiovascular remodelling in Fabry disease. Our findings have implications for the treatment of cardiovascular involvement in Fabry disease.
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BACKGROUND/AIMS: After treatment with heat-killed Propionibacterium acnes mice show dense hepatic granuloma formation. Such mice develop liver injury in an interleukin (IL)-18-dependent manner after challenge with a sublethal dose LPS. As previously shown, LPS-stimulated Kupffer cells secrete IL-18 depending on caspase-1 and Toll-like receptor (TLR)-4 but independently of its signal adaptor myeloid differentiation factor 88 (MyD88), suggesting importance of another signal adaptor TIR domain-containing adapter inducing IFN-beta (TRIF). Nalp3 inflammasome reportedly controls caspase-1 activation. Here we investigated the roles of MyD88 and TRIF in P. acnes-induced hepatic granuloma formation and LPS-induced caspase-1 activation for IL-18 release. METHODS: Mice were sequentially treated with P. acnes and LPS, and their serum IL-18 levels and liver injuries were determined by ELISA and ALT/AST measurement, respectively. Active caspase-1 in LPS-stimulated Kupffer cells was determined by Western blotting. RESULTS: Macrophage-ablated mice lacked P. acnes-induced hepatic granuloma formation and LPS-induced serum IL-18 elevation and liver injury. Myd88(-/-) Kupffer cells, but not Trif(-/-) cells, exhibited normal caspase-1 activation upon TLR4 engagement in vitro. Myd88(-/-) mice failed to develop hepatic granulomas after P. acnes treatment and liver injury induced by LPS challenge. In contrast, Trif(-/-) mice normally formed the hepatic granulomas, but could not release IL-18 or develop the liver injury. Nalp3(-/-) mice showed the same phenotypes of Trif(-/-) mice. CONCLUSIONS: Propionibacterium acnes treatment MyD88-dependently induced hepatic granuloma formation. Subsequent LPS TRIF-dependently activated caspase-1 via Nalp3 inflammasome and induced IL-18 release, eventually leading to the liver injury.
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Eosinophil recruitment is a characteristic feature of a number of pathological conditions and was the topic of the recent International Symposium on allergic inflammation, asthma, parasitic and infectious diseases (Rio de Janeiro, June 3-5, 1996). Since interleukin5 (IL5) is believed to regulate the growth, differentiation and activation of eosinophils (Coffman et al. 1989, Sanderson 1992), the role of eosinophils and IL5 are closely linked. Although IL5 specifically regulates eosinophilia in vivo and this is its most well established activity, it is becoming clear that IL5 also has other biological effects. The recent derivation of an IL5 deficient mouse (Kopf et al. 1996), provides a model for exploring not only the role of IL5 and eosinophils but also other novel activities of IL5. Of note is that although the IL5 deficient mice cannot elicit a pronounced eosinophilia in response to inflammatory stimulation following aeroallergen challenge or parasite infection they still produce basal levels of eosinophils that appear to be morphologically and functionally normal. However, the basal levels of eosinophils appear insufficient for normal host defence as IL5 deficiency has now been shown to compromise defence against several helminth infections. In addition, IL5 deficient mice appear to have functional deficiencies in B-1 B lymphocytes and in IgA production.
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The longstanding concept that corneal epithelial stem cells reside mainly in the limbus is supported by the absence of major corneal epithelial differentiation markers, that is, K3 and K12 keratins, in limbal basal cells (these markers are expressed, however, in corneal basal cells, thus distinguishing the mode of keratin expression in corneal epithelium from that of all other stratified epithelia), the centripetal migration of corneal epithelial cells, the exclusive location of slow-cycling cells in the limbal basal layer, the superior in vitro proliferative potential of limbal epithelial cells, and the transplanted limbal cells' ability to reconstitute corneal epithelium in vivo (reviewed in refs 1-4). Moreover, previous data indicate that corneal and conjunctival epithelia represent two separate cell lineages (reviewed in refs 1-4). Majo et al. suggested, however, that corneal and conjunctival epithelia are equipotent, and that identical oligopotent stem cells are present throughout the corneal, limbal and conjunctival epithelia. We point out here that these suggestions are inconsistent with many known growth, differentiation and cell migration properties of the anterior ocular epithelia.
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Cancer development results from deregulated control of stem cell populations and alterations in their surrounding environment. Notch signaling is an important form of direct cell-cell communication involved in cell fate determination, stem cell potential and lineage commitment. The biological function of this pathway is critically context dependent. Here we review the pro-differentiation role and tumor suppressing function of this pathway, as revealed by loss-of-function in keratinocytes and skin, downstream of p53 and in cross-connection with other determinants of stem cell potential and/or tumor formation, such as p63 and Rho/CDC42 effectors. The possibility that Notch signaling elicits a duality of signals, involved in growth/differentiation control and cell survival will be discussed, in the context of novel approaches for cancer therapy
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Abstract The c-myc gene is one of the most frequently mutated oncogenes found in human tumors. c-Myc has been implicated in the regulation of various biological processes including cell cycle progression, cellular growth, differentiation, angiogenesis, immortalization and apoptosis. To assess the normal role of c-Myc in epithelial cell types in vitro and in vivo we have deleted the c-myc gene in keratinocytes and in the adult skin epidermis by conditional Cre/loxP mediated recombination. Similar to what we have previously shown in mouse embryonic fibroblasts acute elimination of c-Myc activity in cultured keratinocytes causes cells to cease proliferation and adapt a flat cell morphology. Mutant cells accumulate in a diploid Ki67neg stage, indicative of a quiescent Go stage. This demonstrates that c-Myc activity is essential to maintain keratinocytes in a productive cell cycle. In addition, mutant keratinocytes showed a defect in Ca2+ induced induction of the differentiation marker Keratin 1 suggesting a role for c-Myc during differentiation. To assess the in vivo role of c-Myc we used a tamoxifen inducible K5::CreERT transgene to delete the c-myc gene in the adult skin epidermis. Unexpectedly, despite strong c-Myc expression in the basal compartment it is not required for maintenance of the skin epidermis in the adult mouse. The epidermis appeared normal with respect to both proliferation and differentiation. In addition, no selection against c-Myc deficient epidermal cells occurred over many months, further confirming that c-Myc is dispensable for normal skin homeostasis. Even more surprising, TPA induced hyperproliferation also occurred in a c-Myc independent manner. Treatment of the skin with the mutagen DMBA prior to TPA is a classical way to induce papillomas by selecting for mutations that lead to dominant activation of the oncogene Ha-Ras. Most interestingly tumor formation was severely inhibited suggesting that tumor progression requires endogenous c-Myc. Further studies are required to address whether the role of c-Myc in the activation of telomerase or the Werner protein, or its role to induce angiogenesis is required for skin tumor progression, In conclusion, this work shows that while c-Myc is not required for maintenance or hyperplasia of mouse epidermis, it is essential for skin tumor progression in collaboration with Ras. Résumé Le gène c-myc est un des oncogènes les plus fréquemment mutés dans les tumeurs humaines. c-Myc est impliqué dans la régulation de processus biologiques variés, comme la progression du cycle cellulaire, la croissance cellulaire, la différenciation, l'angiogenèse, l'immortalisation et l'apoptose. Pour caractériser le rôle physiologique de c-Myc dans les cellules de type épithélial in vitro et in vivo, le gène c-myc a été délété dans des kératinocytes primaires et dans l'épiderme de peau de souris adultes par des recombinaisons conditionnelles (système Cre/loxP). De la même façon que dans les fibroblastes d'embryon de souris, l'élimination aiguë de l'activité de c-Myc dans les kératinocytes en culture primaire provoque l'arrêt de la prolifération des cellules et leur applatissement morphologique. Les cellules mutantes restent dans un stade diploïde Ki67neg, indiquant un stade quiescent Go. Cela démontre que l'activité de c-Myc est essentielle pour maintenir les kératinocytes dans le cycle cellulaire. De plus, les kératinocytes mutants montrent une déficience pour le marqueur de différenciation Kératine 1 au cours de la différenciation induite par le calcium, suggérant un rôle de c-Myc dans la différenciation cellulaire. Pour comprendre le rôle de c-Myc in vivo, le transgène K5::CreERT inductible par le tamoxifen a été utilisé pour déléter le gène c-inyc dans l'épiderme de souris adultes. Etonnemment, malgré une forte expression de c-Myc dans le compartiment basal de l'épiderme, ce gène n'est pas nécessaire pour la maintenance de l'épiderme de la peau chez la souris adulte. L'épiderme apparait normal avec une prolifération et une différenciation physiologique des cellules. De plus, il n'y a pas de sélection contre les cellules épidennales c-Myc déficientes après plusieurs mois, ce qui confirme que c-Myc n'est pas nécessaire pour l'homéostasie normale de la peau. Encore plus surprenant, une hyperprolifération est également induite par du TPA chez les souris mutantes, impliquant une voie de prolifération indépendante de c-Myc. Le traitement de la peau par le mutagène DMBA avant le traitement au TPA est une voie classique d'induction de papillomes, par sélection de mutations conduisant à l'activation de l'oncogène Ha-Ras. La formation des tumeurs est fortement inhibée chez les souris mutantes, suggérant que la progression des tumeurs nécessite la présence endogène de c-Myc. De nouvelles études sont nécessaires pour savoir si c-Myc a un rôle dans l'activation de la télomérase ou de la protéine de Werner, ou encore dans l'angiogénèse, qui sont nécessaires pour la progression tumorale. En conclusion, ce travail montre que même si c-Myc n'est pas nécessaire pour la maintenance ou l'hyperplasie de la peau de souris, il est essentiel pour la progression des tumeurs de la peau en collaboration avec Ras.
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Dendritic cell (DC) populations consist of multiple subsets that are essential orchestrators of the immune system. Technological limitations have so far prevented systems-wide accurate proteome comparison of rare cell populations in vivo. Here, we used high-resolution mass spectrometry-based proteomics, combined with label-free quantitation algorithms, to determine the proteome of mouse splenic conventional and plasmacytoid DC subsets to a depth of 5,780 and 6,664 proteins, respectively. We found mutually exclusive expression of pattern recognition pathways not previously known to be different among conventional DC subsets. Our experiments assigned key viral recognition functions to be exclusively expressed in CD4(+) and double-negative DCs. The CD8alpha(+) DCs largely lack the receptors required to sense certain viruses in the cytoplasm. By avoiding activation via cytoplasmic receptors, including retinoic acid-inducible gene I, CD8alpha(+) DCs likely gain a window of opportunity to process and present viral antigens before activation-induced shutdown of antigen presentation pathways occurs.
Plasmacytoid dendritic cells sense skin injury and promote wound healing through type I interferons.
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Plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs) are specialized type I interferon (IFN-α/β)-producing cells that express intracellular toll-like receptor (TLR) 7 and TLR9 and recognize viral nucleic acids in the context of infections. We show that pDCs also have the ability to sense host-derived nucleic acids released in common skin wounds. pDCs were found to rapidly infiltrate both murine and human skin wounds and to transiently produce type I IFNs via TLR7- and TLR9-dependent recognition of nucleic acids. This process was critical for the induction of early inflammatory responses and reepithelization of injured skin. Cathelicidin peptides, which facilitate immune recognition of released nucleic acids by promoting their access to intracellular TLR compartments, were rapidly induced in skin wounds and were sufficient but not necessary to stimulate pDC activation and type I IFN production. These data uncover a new role of pDCs in sensing tissue damage and promoting wound repair at skin surfaces.
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MyD88 has a modular organization, an N-terminal death domain (DD) related to the cytoplasmic signaling domains found in many members of the tumor necrosis factor receptor (TNF-R) superfamily, and a C-terminal Toll domain similar to that found in the expanding family of Toll/interleukin-1-like receptors (IL-1R). This dual domain structure, together with the following observations, supports a role for MyD88 as an adapter in IL-1 signal transduction; MyD88 forms homodimers in vivo through DD-DD and Toll-Toll interactions. Overexpression of MyD88 induces activation of the c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) and the transcription factor NF-kappaB through its DD. A point mutation in MyD88, MyD88-lpr (F56N), which prevents dimerization of the DD, also blocks induction of these activities. MyD88-induced NF-kappaB activation is inhibited by the dominant negative versions of TRAF6 and IRAK, which also inhibit IL-1-induced NF-kappaB activation. Overexpression of MyD88-lpr or MyD88-Toll (expressing only the Toll domain) acted to inhibit IL-1-induced NF-kappaB and JNK activation in a 293 cell line overexpressing the IL-1RI. MyD88 coimmunoprecipitates with the IL-1R signaling complex in an IL-1-dependent manner.
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The ATP-binding cassette (ABC) family of proteins comprise a group of membrane transporters involved in the transport of a wide variety of compounds, such as xenobiotics, vitamins, lipids, amino acids, and carbohydrates. Determining their regional expression patterns along the intestinal tract will further characterize their transport functions in the gut. The mRNA expression levels of murine ABC transporters in the duodenum, jejunum, ileum, and colon were examined using the Affymetrix MuU74v2 GeneChip set. Eight ABC transporters (Abcb2, Abcb3, Abcb9, Abcc3, Abcc6, Abcd1, Abcg5, and Abcg8) displayed significant differential gene expression along the intestinal tract, as determined by two statistical models (a global error assessment model and a classic ANOVA, both with a P < 0.01). Concordance with semiquantitative real-time PCR was high. Analyzing the promoters of the differentially expressed ABC transporters did not identify common transcriptional motifs between family members or with other genes; however, the expression profile for Abcb9 was highly correlated with fibulin-1, and both genes share a common complex promoter model involving the NFkappaB, zinc binding protein factor (ZBPF), GC-box factors SP1/GC (SP1F), and early growth response factor (EGRF) transcription binding motifs. The cellular location of another of the differentially expressed ABC transporters, Abcc3, was examined by immunohistochemistry. Staining revealed that the protein is consistently expressed in the basolateral compartment of enterocytes along the anterior-posterior axis of the intestine. Furthermore, the intensity of the staining pattern is concordant with the expression profile. This agrees with previous findings in which the mRNA, protein, and transport function of Abcc3 were increased in the rat distal intestine. These data reveal regional differences in gene expression profiles along the intestinal tract and demonstrate that a complete understanding of intestinal ABC transporter function can only be achieved by examining the physiologically distinct regions of the gut.