964 resultados para Carotenoid Cleavage Dioxygenase
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Accessing chirally pure cis-diols from arenes using micro-organisms over-expressing toluene dioxygenase (TDO) is now well established, but the conversions remain low for the more toxic and volatile substrates. For such arenes, improved production has already been achieved in the presence of hydrophobic non-toxic ionic liquids (ILs) acting in the form of a reservoir for the arene substrate. Yet, the costs associated with such ILs require extensive process development to render them viable. Herein, we show that optimization of the hydrophobic IL's cationic moiety and of the IL's concentration are key to enhanced conversion yielding between a 2-5 fold yield increase in the conversion of four haloarenes (Ph-X; X = F, Cl, Br, I). Additionally, we report that hydrophilic imidazolium-based ILs offer opportunities to achieve similarly high yielding biotransformations, with further improved reaction rates (<6 h), and this at very low ILs' concentrations (0.0015 VIL/Vaq). We also demonstrate that the increased biotransformations are due to these ILs being inhibitors of cellular respiration processes and thus favoring the shunting of NADH and O2 towards the overexpressed biocatalytic process. © 2014 the Partner Organisations.
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Background
High density lipoproteins (HDL) have many cardioprotective roles; however, in subjects with type 2 diabetes (T2D) these cardioprotective properties are diminished. Conversely, increased fruit and vegetable (F&V) intake may reduce cardiovascular disease risk, although direct trial evidence of a mechanism by which this occurs in subjects with T2D is lacking. Therefore, the aim of this study was to examine if increased F&V consumption influenced the carotenoid content and enzymes associated with the antioxidant properties of HDL in subjects with T2D.
MethodsEighty obese subjects with T2D were randomised to a 1- or ≥6-portion/day F&V diet for 8-weeks. Fasting serum was collected pre- and post-intervention. HDL was subfractionated into HDL2 and HDL3 by rapid ultracentrifugation. Carotenoids were measured in serum, HDL2 and HDL3 by high performance liquid chromatography. The activity of paraoxonase-1 (PON-1) was measured in serum, HDL2 and HDL3 by a spectrophotometric assay, while the activity of lecithin cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) was measured in serum, HDL2 and HDL3 by a fluorometric assay.
ResultsIn the ≥6- vs. 1-portion post-intervention comparisons, carotenoids increased in serum, HDL2 and particularly HDL3, (α-carotene, p = 0.008; β-cryptoxanthin, p = 0.042; lutein, p = 0.012; lycopene, p = 0.016), as did the activities of PON-1 and LCAT in HDL3 (p = 0.006 and 0.044, respectively).
ConclusionTo our knowledge, this is the first study in subjects with T2D to demonstrate that increased F&V intake augmented the carotenoid content and influenced enzymes associated with the antioxidant properties of HDL. We suggest that these changes would enhance the cardioprotective properties of this lipoprotein.
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Several recent articles have reached different conclusions regarding the impact of the religious–secular cleavage in Chile. The resolution of this debate has important consequences for the understanding of cleavages. Studies subscribing to the view that parties have considerable agency in the maintenance of cleavages have found that religiosity no longer affects vote choice, while studies rooted in a sociological perspective argue that religiosity still matters. We show that the reason for the discrepant results is because a partisan realignment is underway, whereby religious voters are gradually shifting their loyalties from the parties of the left to the parties of the right, matching a division that has taken place at the elite level. These results are consistent with an issue evolution perspective, which provides a clearer articulation of how cleavages form than either the agency or the sociological approaches.
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Research focusing on several post-communist countries has found evidence of social cleavage effects on political behaviour similar to those found in Western Europe. In some post-communist countries, however, social cleavage effects appear far weaker (if at all). To understand why this is the case, I perform a case study of Romania, focusing on the religious–secular cleavage. Drawing upon research that emphasises the role of parties in forming cleavages, I argue that the reason for the absence of social cleavage effects is due to party competition for the same group of voters by parties from opposing ends of the ideological spectrum. By shifting their positions, some parties have prevented the appearance of cleavages by shaping individuals' perceptions of the parties and, in doing so, have even altered individuals' own left–right self-placements.
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At its core, Duverger’s Law—holding that the number of viable parties in first-past-the-post systems should not exceed two—applies primarily at the district level. While the number of parties nationally may exceed two, district-level party system fragmentation should not. Given that a growing body of research shows that district-level party system fragmentation can indeed exceed two in first-past-the-post systems, I explore whether the major alternative explanation for party system fragmentation—the social cleavage approach—can explain such violations of Duverger’s Law. Testing this argument in several West European elections prior to the adoption of proportional representation, I find evidence favouring a social cleavage explanation: with the expansion of the class cleavage, the average district-level party system eventually came to violate the two-party predictions associated with Duverger’s Law. This suggests that sufficient social cleavage diversity may produce multiparty systems in other first-past-the-post systems.
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Using toluene dioxygenase as biocatalyst, enantiopure cisdihydrodiol and cis-tetrahydrodiol metabolites, isolated as their ketone tautomers, were obtained from meta and ortho methoxyphenols. Although these isomeric phenol substrates are structurally similar, the major bioproducts from each of these biotransformations were found at different oxidation levels. The relatively stable cyclohexenone cis-diol metabolite from meta methoxyphenol was isolated, while the corresponding metabolite from ortho methoxyphenol was rapidly bioreduced to a cyclohexanone cis-diol. The chemistry of the 3-methoxycyclohexenone cis-diol product was investigated and elimination, aromatization, hydrogenation, regioselective O-exchange, Stork−Danheiser transposition and O-methylation reactions were observed. An offshoot of this technology provided a two-step chemoenzymatic synthesis, from meta methoxyphenol, of a recently reported chiral fungal metabolite; this synthesis also established the previously unassigned absolute configuration.
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A mutant strain (UV4) of the soil bacterium Pseudomonas putida, containing toluene dioxygenase, has been used in the metabolic oxidation of 1,2-dihydrobenzocyclobutene 12 dagger and the related substrates 1,2-dihydrobenzocyclobuten-1-ol 13 and biphenylene 33. Stable angular cis-monohydrodiol metabolites (1R,2S)-bicyclo[4.2.0]octa-3,5-diene-1,2 7, (1S,2S,8S)-bicyclo[4.2.0]octa-3,5-diene-1,2,8-triol 8 and biphenylene-cis-1,8b-diol 9, isolated from each of these substrates, have been structurally and stereochemically assigned. The structure, enantiopurity and absolute configuration of the other cis-diol metabolites, (2R,3S)-bicyclo[4.2.0]octa-1(6),4-diene-2,3-diol 14 and cis-1,2-dihydroxy-1,2-dihydrobenzocyclobutene 16, and the benzylic oxidation bioproducts, 1,2-dihydrobenzocyclobuten-1-ol 13, 1,2-dihydrobenzocyclobuten-1-one 15 and 2-hydroxy-1,2-dihydrobenzocyclobuten-1-one 17, obtained from 1,2-dihydrobenzocyclobutene and 1,2-dihydrobenzocyclobuten-1-ol, have been determined with the aid of chiral stationary-phase HPLC, NMR and CD spectroscopy, and stereochemical correlation. X-Ray crystallographic methods have been used in the determination of absolute configuration of the di-camphanates 27 (from diol 7) and 32 (from diol 9), and the di-MTPA ester 29 (from diol 14) of the corresponding cis-diol metabolites. The metabolic sequence involved in the formation of bioproducts derived from 1,2-dihydrobenzocyclobutene 12 has been investigated.
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PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to determine whether combining potential biomarkers of fruit and vegetables is better at predicting FV intake within FV intervention studies than single biomarkers.
DESIGN: Data from a tightly controlled randomised FV intervention study (BIOFAV; all food provided and two meals/day on weekdays consumed under supervision) were used. A total of 30 participants were randomised to either 2, 5 or 8 portions FV/day for 4 weeks, and blood samples were collected at baseline and 4 weeks for plasma vitamin C and serum carotenoid analysis. The combined biomarker approach was also tested in three further FV intervention studies conducted by the same research team, with less strict dietary control (FV provided and no supervised meals).
RESULTS: The combined model containing all carotenoids and vitamin C was a better fit than either the vitamin C only (P < 0.001) model or the lutein only (P = 0.006) model in the BIOFAV study. The C-statistic was slightly lower in the lutein only model (0.85) and in the model based upon factor analysis (0.88), and much lower in the vitamin C model (0.68) compared with the full model (0.95). Results for the other studies were similar, although the differences between the models were less marked.
CONCLUSIONS: Although there was some variation between studies, which may relate to the level of dietary control or participant characteristics, a combined biomarker approach to assess overall FV consumption may more accurately predict FV intake within intervention studies than the use of a single biomarker. The generalisability of these findings to other populations and study designs remains to be tested.
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Endothelial dysfunction is a central pathomechanism in diabetes-associated complications. We hypothesized a pathogenic role in this dysfunction of cathepsin S (Cat-S), a cysteine protease that degrades elastic fibers and activates the protease-activated receptor-2 (PAR2) on endothelial cells. We found that injection of mice with recombinant Cat-S induced albuminuria and glomerular endothelial cell injury in a PAR2-dependent manner. In vivo microscopy confirmed a role for intrinsic Cat-S/PAR2 in ischemia-induced microvascular permeability. In vitro transcriptome analysis and experiments using siRNA or specific Cat-S and PAR2 antagonists revealed that Cat-S specifically impaired the integrity and barrier function of glomerular endothelial cells selectively through PAR2. In human and mouse type 2 diabetic nephropathy, only CD68(+) intrarenal monocytes expressed Cat-S mRNA, whereas Cat-S protein was present along endothelial cells and inside proximal tubular epithelial cells also. In contrast, the cysteine protease inhibitor cystatin C was expressed only in tubules. Delayed treatment of type 2 diabetic db/db mice with Cat-S or PAR2 inhibitors attenuated albuminuria and glomerulosclerosis (indicators of diabetic nephropathy) and attenuated albumin leakage into the retina and other structural markers of diabetic retinopathy. These data identify Cat-S as a monocyte/macrophage-derived circulating PAR2 agonist and mediator of endothelial dysfunction-related microvascular diabetes complications. Thus, Cat-S or PAR2 inhibition might be a novel strategy to prevent microvascular disease in diabetes and other diseases.
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Introduction: Neuropeptides contribute to the pathophysiology of peripheral inflammation and a neurogenic component has been described for many inflammatory diseases, including periodontitis. Neuropeptides are susceptible to cleavage by peptidases and therefore the exact location and level of expression of peptidases are major determinants of neuropeptide action. Previous studies by our research group suggested that levels of the neuropeptide calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) may be regulated by peptidases present in gingival crevicular fluid (GCF). Objectives: The aim of this work was to purify and partially characterize the GCF enzyme responsible for CGRP degradation using a biotinylated hydroxymate affinity probe (based on the P1-P4 amino acid sequence of the observed cleavage site) which we previously showed to inhibit CGRP degradation. Methods: Pooled healthy and pooled periodontitis GCF samples were subject to a pre-clear step with magnetic streptavadin beads. Healthy and diseased samples were incubated with the biotinylated hydroxymate probe (20 uM) after which biotinylated proteins were purified from the sample using magnetic streptavadin beads. Bound proteins were subjected to SDS-PAGE and western blotting. Biotin incorporated proteins were disclosed using a streptavadin horse radish peroxidase conjugate. Results: A band was disclosed in the periodontitis pooled sample at a molecular weight of approximately 60 kDa. The band was absent in the pooled healthy samples. As expected, when periodontitis samples were pre-boiled to denature proteins before the addition of the hydroxymate probe, no biotin incorporated band was present. Conclusions: This work demonstrates the purification and disclosure of a protein found specifically in periodontitis which binds to the specific biotinylated hydroxymate affinity probe based on the cleavage site of CGRP only when in its native form. We intend to scale up the sample size thus allowing the identification of the putative CGRP degrading peptidase using MALDI-mass spectrometry.
Funded by an IADR/GlaxoSmithKline Innovation in Oral Care Award
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Cancer is one of the leading causes of death in the world. Despite this, a growing number of people are surviving the disease due to medical advancements and the development of numerous new therapies. Doxorubicin, a chemotherapeutic agent, is a widely-used and successful first-line anti-tumour treatment. However, the established toxic and deleterious effects of the drug on the cardiovascular system confer increased risk of congestive heart failure, thereby necessitating the use of reduced doxorubicin doses. In order to investigate how these events are initiated, mouse cardiomyocytes (HL-1) were treated in vitro with varying concentrations of doxorubicin (0.5-4.0 µmol/L). Following treatment (24h), a marked level of cell death was observed in comparison to untreated cardiomyocytes; the level of death appeared to correlate with the concentration of the drug used. Western blotting revealed the cleavage of full length Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) into 89 and 24kDa fragments, a process which is instrumental in triggering programmed cell death/apoptosis. Importantly, results suggested that this event may be independent of caspase 3 cleavage and thus activation. A number of previous studies have reported a functional role for both Mitofusin-2 (Mfn2) and NADPH oxidase 2 (Nox2) in the cardiotoxic response. Given that PARP cleavage is a validated indicator of cellular apoptosis, these results clearly indicate that this marker could be used in future studies when determining if depletion of the above proteins would cause a reduction in or eradicate the pro-apoptotic action of this agent on cardiomyocytes. Such investigations may lead to significant developments in ensuring that doxorubicin can achieve its full therapeutic anti-tumour potential without causing the subsequent deleterious effects on the cardiovascular system.
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Phenyl and methyls (1) have found increasing interest in organic synthesis. They have been prepared from aldehydes or ketones (2) and selenols, from 1,1-bis(phenylseleno)-alkanes, and from 1,1,1-tris(seleno)-alkanes (5).
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Tese de mestrado, Neurociências, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de Lisboa, 2016
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A number of novel, water-stable redox-active cobalt complexes of the C-functionalized tripodal ligands tris(pyrazolyl)methane XC(pz)(3) (X = HOCH2, CH2OCH2Py or CH2OSO2Me) are reported along with their effects on DNA. The compounds were isolated as air-stable solids and fully characterized by IR and FIR spectroscopies, ESI-MS(+/-), cyclic voltammetry, controlled potential electrolysis, elemental analysis and, in a number of cases, also by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. They showed moderate cytotoxicity in vitro towards HCT116 colorectal carcinoma and HepG2 hepatocellular carcinoma human cancer cell lines. This viability loss is correlated with an increase of tumour cell lines apoptosis. Reactivity studies with biomolecules, such as reducing agents, H2O2, plasmid DNA and UV-visible titrations were also performed to provide tentative insights into the mode of action of the complexes. Incubation of Co(II) complexes with pDNA induced double strand breaks, without requiring the presence of any activator. This pDNA cleavage appears to be mediated by O-centred radical species.