864 resultados para Ascites microenvironment
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Our study describes tissue-specific migration of T and B cells during a localized anti-viral immune response. After mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) injection, B lymphocytes of the draining lymph node become infected and present a retroviral superantigen to CD4(+) T lymphocytes. Infected B cells receive superantigen-mediated help in a fashion comparable to classical immune responses. To investigate the fate of T and B lymphocytes that had interacted via cognate help in the same peripheral lymph node microenvironment we adoptively transferred them into naive recipients. Here we show that MMTV-infected B cells and superantigen-stimulated T cells were programmed to migrate to distinct sites of the body. Plasmablasts but not T cells migrated to the mammary gland and activated alpha4beta1 integrins were found to have a crucial role in the migration to the mammary gland. In contrast, T cells had a much higher affinity for secondary lymphoid organs and large intestine. This demonstrates that upon antigen-driven B and T lymphocyte interaction in the local draining lymph node a subset-specific homing program for B and T lymphocytes is induced.
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Summary Resolution of the inflammation is as important as its induction. In this thesis, we investigated the contributions of two prominent factors involved in inflammation, Tumour Necrosis Factor (TNF) and neutrophils. We studied their role in the resolution óf the inflammatory lesion induced by the infection with the protozoan parasite Leishmania major. In mice susceptible to infection with L. major, unhealing lesions are characterized by an elevated number and sustained presence of inflammatory neutrophils in the infected tissue, illustrating an acute inflammatory process. In contrast, mice from resistant strains, which resolve their lesions, can control the presence of neutrophils at the site of infection. Neutrophil persistence in the infected tissue may result from several events including an increased survival of neutrophils mediated by factors produced by the pathogen or the microenvironment. Following infection with L. major, the cellular composition of the inflammatory lesion differs significantly between susceptible and resistant mice and a higher proportion of macrophages is present in the lesions of resistant strains. In an attempt to clarify the factors involved in neutrophil persistence, we investigated the mechanisms modulating neutrophil cell death. We demonstrated that macrophages could induce neutrophil apoptosis in a process involving TNF. TNF is an essential cytokine with pro- and anti-inflammatory properties, which is expressed as a transmembrane protein that can be cleaved releasing the secreted form. Our data show the essential role of the transmembrane form of TNF (mTNF) in the induction of neutrophil apoptosis by macrophages, revealing macrophages and mTNF as important regulators of neutrophil apoptosis. TNF is critical in the resolution of the inflammatory lesion induced by L. major infection, and in L. major resistant strains its absence results in increased swelling of the lesions. We investigated the contribution of mTNF in the outcome of L. major infection. Our data demonstrate that following infection with L. major, mTNF is sufficient to support the resolution of the inflammatory lesion and optimal parasite killing. In addition, we show that the presence of mTNF is essential to induce neutrophil clearance in the infected tissue. While the persistence of neutrophils is deleterious for the host, we could demonstrate an early anti-inflammatory role of neutrophils. Altogether, this study demonstrates the importance of mTNF in the induction of neutrophil apoptosis, a process involved in the resolution of the inflammatory lesion induced by L. major infection. Résumé La résolution de l'inflammation est toute aussi importante que son initiation. Durant ce travail de thèse, nous avons étudié les contributions de deux facteurs importants impliqués dans l'inflammation, le TNF (Facteur Nécrosant des Tumeurs) et les neutrophiles, dans la résolution de la lésion inflammatoire induite par l'infection avec le parasite protozoaire Leishmania major. Chez les souris sensibles à l'infection avec L. major, des lésions importantes qui ne guérissent pas se développent ; celles-ci sont caractérisées par un nombre élevé et une présence soutenue de neutrophiles dans les tissus infectés, ce qui illustre un processus inflammatoire aigu. Au contraire, les souris résistantes à l'infection qui guérissent leurs lésions, sont capables de contrôler la présence des neutrophiles au site d'infection. La persistance des neutrophiles dans la lésion inflammatoire peut être la conséquence de plusieurs événements, dont une augmentation de la survie des neutrophiles induite par des facteurs produits par le pathogène ou le micro-environnement. Suite à l'infection avec L. major, la composition cellulaire de la lésion inflammatoire est significativement différente entre les souris sensibles et résistantes à l'infection, et une plus grande proportion de macrophages est présente dans les lésions des souris résistantes. Dans l'objectif de clarifier les facteurs impliqués dans la persistance des neutrophiles dans les tissus infectés par L. major, nous avons étudié les mécanismes de régulation de la mort des neutrophiles. Nous avons démontré que les macrophages pouvaient induire l'apoptose des neutrophiles dans un procédé impliquant le TNF. Le TNF est une cytokine aux propriétés pro- et anti-inflammatoires, exprimée sous une forme transmembranaire qui peut être clivée pour relâcher la forme sécrétée. Nos expériences illustrent le rôle essentiel de la forme transmembranaire du TNF (mTNF) dans l'induction de l'apoptose des neutrophiles par les macrophages. Lé TNF est une cytokine importante dans la résolution de la réaction inflammatoire induite par L. major, et chez les souris résistantes l'absence de TNF provoque des lésions inflammatoires plus importantes. Nous avons étudié la contribution du mTNF dans la résolution de l'infection avec L. major. Nos résultats démontrent que suite à une infection avec le parasite, la présence du mTNF est suffisante pour guérir la lésion inflammatoire et contrôler efficacement la réplication du parasite. De plus, le mTNF joue un rôle essentiel dans l'élimination des neutrophiles du tissu infecté. Alors que la persistance des neutrophiles est nocive pour l'hôte, nous avons montré que les neutrophiles avaient un rôle précoce anti-inflammatoire. En résumé, cette étude révèle l'importance du mTNF dans l'induction de l'apoptose des neutrophiles par les macrophages, un procédé impliqué dans la résolution de la lésion inflammatoire induite par l'infection avec L. major.
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The central role of chronic inflammation in the promotion of tumor growth is supported by a broad range of experimental and clinical evidence. However, the molecular mechanisms converting transient inflammatory tissue reactions into a tumor-promoting microenvironment remain largely elusive. Because inflammasomes have been shown to regulate the proinflammatory cytokines interleukin 1β (IL-1β) and IL-18, they have been implicated in the relationship between tumor genesis/progression and inflammation. For instance, many cancers have been directly linked to inflammasome-mediated sterile inflammation, where a blockade of IL-1β and IL-18 has been shown to inhibit tumor growth. On the other hand, inflammasome activation also has potent antitumorigenic effects, where malignant precursor cells are eliminated through pyroptotic cell death. Indeed, inflammasome activity can even increase the efficacy of certain chemotherapies. Here, we review the current understanding on the complex and sometimes contradictory role of inflammasomes in carcinogenesis.
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Cancer progression is dependent, in part, on interactions between tumor cells and the host microenvironment. During pregnancy, physiological changes occur that include inflammation and reduced immunity, both of which can promote tumor growth. Accordingly, tumors are observed to be more aggressive and to have greater proclivity toward metastasis during pregnancy. In this work, myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSC), a population of heterogeneous and pluripotent cells that can down-regulate immune responses during pathological conditions, were studied in the context of mouse and human gestation. The gene expression profile of mouse MDSC has been shown to differ in pregnant and virgin mice, and the profile in pregnant animals bears similarity to that of MDSC associated with the tumor microenvironment. Common induced genes include Fibronectin1 and Olfactomedin4, which are known to be involved in extracellular matrix remodeling and tissue permissiveness to tumor cells implantation. Our observations suggest that mouse MDSC may represent a shared regulatory mechanism of tissue permissiveness that occurs during the physiological state of gestation and tumor growth. Pregnancy-associated changes in immunosuppressive myeloid cell activity have also been studied in humans. We show that CD33+ myeloid cells isolated from PBMC (peripheral blood mononuclear cells) of pregnant women are more strongly immunosuppressive on T cells than CD33+ cells removed from non-pregnant subjects. During murine gestation, decreased natural killer (NK) cell activity is responsible, at least in part, for the increase in experimental metastasis. However, although peripheral blood NK cell numbers and cytotoxicity were slightly reduced in pregnant women, neither appeared to be regulated by CD33+ cells. Nevertheless, based on its observed suppression of T cell responses, the CD33+ PBMC subset appears to be an appropriate myeloid cell population to study in order to elucidate mechanisms of immune regulation that occur during human pregnancy. Our findings regarding the immunosuppressive function of CD33+cells and the role of NK cells during human pregnancy are consistent with the notion that changes in the function of the immune system participate in the constitution of a permissive soil for tumour progression.
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The tumor microenvironment mediates induction of the immunosuppressive programmed cell death-1 (PD-1) pathway, and targeted interventions against this pathway can help restore antitumor immunity. To gain insight into these responses, we studied the interaction between PD-1 expressed on T cells and its ligands (PD-1:PD-L1, PD-1:PD-L2, and PD-L1:B7.1), expressed on other cells in the tumor microenvironment, using a syngeneic orthotopic mouse model of epithelial ovarian cancer (ID8). Exhaustion of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) correlated with expression of PD-1 ligands by tumor cells and tumor-derived myeloid cells, including tumor-associated macrophages (TAM), dendritic cells, and myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSC). When combined with GVAX or FVAX vaccination (consisting of irradiated ID8 cells expressing granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor or FLT3 ligand) and costimulation by agonistic α-4-1BB or TLR 9 ligand, antibody-mediated blockade of PD-1 or PD-L1 triggered rejection of ID8 tumors in 75% of tumor-bearing mice. This therapeutic effect was associated with increased proliferation and function of tumor antigen-specific effector CD8(+) T cells, inhibition of suppressive regulatory T cells (Treg) and MDSC, upregulation of effector T-cell signaling molecules, and generation of T memory precursor cells. Overall, PD-1/PD-L1 blockade enhanced the amplitude of tumor immunity by reprogramming suppressive and stimulatory signals that yielded more powerful cancer control.
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A distinct subset of T helper cells, named follicular T helper cells (T(FH), has been recently described. T(FH) cells are characterized by their homing capacities in the germinal centers of B-cell follicles where they interact with B cells, supporting B-cell survival and antibody responses. T(FH) cells can be identified by the expression of several markers including the chemokine CXCL13, the costimulatory molecules PD1 and inducible costimulator, and the transcription factor BCL6. They appear to be relevant markers for the diagnosis of angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma (AITL) and have helped to recognize subsets of peripheral T-cell lymphoma, not otherwise specified, with nodal or cutaneous presentation expressing T(FH) antigens that might be related to AITL. In B-cell neoplasms, T(FH) cells are present within the microenvironment of nodular lymphocyte-predominant Hodgkin lymphoma and follicular lymphoma, where they likely support the growth of neoplastic germinal center-derived B cells. Interestingly, the amount of PD1+ cells in the neoplastic follicles might have a favorable impact on the outcome of follicular lymphoma patients. Altogether, the availability of antibodies directed to T(FH)-associated molecules has important diagnostic and prognostic implications in hematopathology. In addition, T(FH) cells could represent interesting targets in T(FH)-derived lymphomas such as AITL, or in some B-cell neoplasms where they act as part of the tumor microenvironment.
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SUMMARY Cancer is one of the leading causes of disease-related mortality. In most cases, death is due to the spread of cells from the primary tumor to distant sites causing formation of metastases. To become tumorigenic, cells should acquire ability, including self-sufficiency in growth signals, insensitivity to anti-growth signals, resistance to apoptosis, sustained angiogenesis, limitless replicative potential and tissue invasion and metastasis. Tumor progression depends, in part on the relationship between tumor cells and host tissue stroma, characterized by changes of tumor cell adhesion to their microenvironment and activation of a variety of extracellular proteases that play a role in ECM degradation. integrins are adhesion proteins implicated in tumorigenesis. Their main function is to mediate cell adhesion to the ECM or to other cells and to create a link between the ECM and the cytoskeleton. Tumor cells like normal cells use integrins to attach to ECM, migrate into surrounding tissues and derive survival and growth signals. Integrin-dependent adhesion and migration are thought to play an important role in tumor dissemination. A strategy was designed to address the role of β1 integrin tumor growth and dissemination. Murine mammary carcinoma (TA3) cells were stably transfected with a soluble β1 integrin construct, which is anticipated to play a dominant negative role, being able to associate with different α-subunits expressed on the cell surface but unable to transduce signals to the nucleus. Results from studies based on soluble β1 integrin TA3 transfectants showed that 1) the integrin expression pattern at the cell surface changed with an induction of α2β1 and α5β1 heterodimers; 2) adhesion to collagens, especially collagen I was increased; 3) tumor dissemination after intrape-ritoneal injection in syngeneic mice was abolished and 4) local growth after orthotopic injection was maintained but delayed. Taken together, the data presented here suggest that β1 integrin plays a potentially important role in the regulation of tumor behavior. RESUME Le cancer est une des principales causes de mortalité suite à une maladie. Dans la plupart des cas, la mort est la conséquence de la dissémination de cellules, provenant de la tumeur primaire, dans des endroits distants et causant la formation de métastases. Afin de devenir cancéreuse, une cellule doit acquérir certaines capacités, telles qu'une auto-suffisance en facteurs de croissance, une insensibilité aux facteurs empêchant la croissance cellulaire, une résistance à l'apoptose, une angiogénèse soutenue, un potentiel de réplication illimité et une capacité à pénétrer dans les tissus et à former des colonies métastatiques. La progression d'une tumeur dépend, en partie, de la relation entre les cellules tumorales et les cellules tissulaires de l'hôte. Cette relation est caractérisée par des modifications des cellules tumorales quant à leur adhésion au microenvironnement et à l'activation de protéases qui permettent de dégrader la matrice extracellulaire. Les intégrines sont des protéines impliquées dans le développement tumoral. Leur fonction principale est de réguler l'adhésion des cellules à la matrice extracellulaire, ou à d'autres cellules, et de créer un lien entre cette matrice extracellulaire et le cytosquelette. Les cellules tumorales utilisent également les intégrines pour se lier à la matrice extracellulaire, pour migrer dans les tissus adjacents et pour induire des signaux de croissance et de survie. Ces événements d'adhésion et de migration, qui dépendent des intégrines, jouent un rôle primordial dans la dissémination des cellules cancéreuses. Une stratégie a été élaborée afin de définir le rôle de l'intégrine β1 durant la croissance et la dissémination des cellules tumorales. Des cellules provenant d'un carcinome de la glande mammaire (TA3) ont été transfectées de manière stable avec un vecteur contenant la séquence codante de la partie extracellulaire de l'intégrine β1. L'intégrine tronquée doit être capable de se lier aux sous-unités α exprimées à la surface de la cellule, mais doit être incapable de transmettre un signal à l'intérieur de la cellule. Les résultats obtenus avec les cellules TA3 transfectées contenant l'intégrine β1 soluble montrent que I) le répertoire d'expression des intégrines à la surface de la cellule a changé en faveur des hétérodimères α2β1 et α5β1; 2) l'adhésion aux collagènes, particulièrement au collagène de type I a augmenté; 3) la dissémination des cellules tumorales après une injection intrapéritonéale est empêchée; 4) la croissance tumorale après une injection orthotopique est conservée mais retardée. Ces résultats montrent que l'intégrine β1 joue un rôle primordial dans la régulation du comportement tumoral.
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BACKGROUND: Chylothorax is an uncommon disorder with respiratory, nutritional and immunological manifestations. Surgical management is indicated in case of recurrence or failure after conservative treatment. We report our experience with video-assisted right-sided supradiaphragmatic thoracic duct ligation for non-traumatic, non-postoperative persistent or recurrent chylothorax. PATIENTS AND METHODS: The medical records of six patients operated at our institution between 1999 and 2004 were retrospectively reviewed. A right-sided chylothorax was found in four patients, a left-sided in one, and a bilateral in one. Three patients developed chylothorax after chemotherapy and chest irradiation for malignant diseases (lymphoma in two patients and breast cancer in one), one in the context of lymphangioleiomyomatosis, one due to a non-diagnosed lymphoma, and one after heart transplantation. RESULTS: The mean operative time was 102 min, with an average length of hospital stay of 14 days. Persistent cessation of chylous effusion within 7 days after surgery was observed in 5/6 patients without recurrence during a mean follow-up time of 41 months. One patient with undiagnosed mediastinal lymphoma required re-operation and thoracic duct ligation on day 8 by right-sided thoracotomy due to persistent chylothorax. No 30-day mortality was recorded. Two patients presented postoperative complications including respiratory insufficiency requiring mechanical ventilation in one, and chylous ascites development requiring peritoneo-venous LeVeen shunting in one patient. CONCLUSIONS: Recurrent or persistent non-traumatic chylothorax may be successfully treated by video-assisted right supradiaphragmatic thoracic duct ligation.
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Background: Advanced pancreatic adenocarcinoma (APC) is a chemoresistant cancer with poor prognosis. We evaluated the use of chemotherapy in the last months of life.Methods: Retrospective analysis of patients with APC treated from 1993 to 2010 at the Oncology Institute of Southern Switzerland. Clinical and laboratory parameters starting from 28 days prior to the last administration of chemotherapy were recorded, including ECOG performance status, presence of ascites, haemoglobin (Hb), white blood cell (WBC) count, platelets, total bilirubin, albumin, LDH, C-reactive protein (C-rp) and Ca 19.9.Results: The characteristics of the 231 patients were: males/females 53%/47%; metastatic/locally advanced disease 80%/20%; median age 66 years (range 32−85). Median overall survival calculated from diagnosis was 6.1 months (95% CI: 5.1−7.2); death was due to disease progression in all cases. At last chemotherapy administration, ECOG performance status was 0−1 in 38% and 2−3 in 62%. Fifty-nine percent of pts received first-line chemotherapy only (gemcitabine in 70%; gemcitabine-based doublets or 5FU in 30%), whilst 32%, 8% and 1% had second- (5FU 37%; oxaliplatinbased doublets 57%; phase I trial 6%), third- and fourth-line therapy (single agent or phase I trial), respectively. The interval between last chemotherapy administration and death was <4 weeks in 24%, _4−12 weeks in 47% and >12 weeks in 29%. Table 1 summarizes the proportion of patients treated according to the interval between last chemotherapy and death refered to chemotherapy line. Median survival from last chemotherapy delivery to death was 7.5 weeks (95% CI 6.7−8.4). In univariate analysis, presence of ascites, elevated WBC, total bilirubin, LDH, C-rp and Ca 19.9, and reduced albumin were found to predict shorter survival (p < 0.05 for each). However, none of them was an independent predictor in the multivariate analysis.Conclusions: A significant proportion of patients with APC received chemotherapy in the last months of life. In our study, none of the clinical and laboratory parameters recorded 28 days priorto the last chemotherapy delivery were found to predict survival.
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Uric acid is the metabolic end product of purine metabolism in humans. It has antioxidant properties that may be protective but can also be pro-oxidant, depending on its chemical microenvironment. Hyperuricemia predisposes to disease through the formation of urate crystals that cause gout, but hyperuricemia, independent of crystal formation, has also been linked with hypertension, atherosclerosis, insulin resistance, and diabetes. We discuss here the biology of urate metabolism and its role in disease. We also cover the genetics of urate transport, including URAT1, and recent studies identifying SLC2A9, which encodes the glucose transporter family isoform Glut9, as a major determinant of plasma uric acid levels and of gout development.
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The ability of tumor cells to leave a primary tumor, to disseminate through the body, and to ultimately seed new secondary tumors is universally agreed to be the basis for metastasis formation. An accurate description of the cellular and molecular mechanisms that underlie this multistep process would greatly facilitate the rational development of therapies that effectively allow metastatic disease to be controlled and treated. A number of disparate and sometimes conflicting hypotheses and models have been suggested to explain various aspects of the process, and no single concept explains the mechanism of metastasis in its entirety or encompasses all observations and experimental findings. The exciting progress made in metastasis research in recent years has refined existing ideas, as well as giving rise to new ones. In this review we survey some of the main theories that currently exist in the field, and show that significant convergence is emerging, allowing a synthesis of several models to give a more comprehensive overview of the process of metastasis. As a result we postulate a stromal progression model of metastasis. In this model, progressive modification of the tumor microenvironment is equally as important as genetic and epigenetic changes in tumor cells during primary tumor progression. Mutual regulatory interactions between stroma and tumor cells modify the stemness of the cells that drive tumor growth, in a manner that involves epithelial-mesenchymal and mesenchymal-epithelial-like transitions. Similar interactions need to be recapitulated at secondary sites for metastases to grow. Early disseminating tumor cells can progress at the secondary site in parallel to the primary tumor, both in terms of genetic changes, as well as progressive development of a metastatic stroma. Although this model brings together many ideas in the field, there remain nevertheless a number of major open questions, underscoring the need for further research to fully understand metastasis, and thereby identify new and effective ways of treating metastatic disease.
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Epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) is the fifth most common cause of cancer death among women. Despite its immunogenicity, effective antitumor responses are limited, due, in part, to the presence of forkhead box protein 3-positive (Foxp3(+)) T regulatory (Treg) cells in the tumor microenvironment. However, the mechanisms that regulate the accumulation and the suppressive function of these Foxp3(+) Treg cells are poorly understood. Here, we found that the majority of Foxp3(+) Treg cells accumulating in the tumor microenvironment of EOCs belong to the subset of Foxp3(+) Treg cells expressing inducible costimulator (ICOS). The expansion and the suppressive function of these cells were strictly dependent on ICOS-L costimulation provided by tumor plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDC). Accordingly, ICOS(+) Foxp3(+) Treg cells were found to localize in close vicinity of tumor pDCs, and their number directly correlated with the numbers of pDCs in the tumors. Furthermore, pDCs and ICOS(+) Foxp3(+) Treg cells were found to be strong predictors for disease progression in patients with ovarian cancer, with ICOS(+) Treg cell subset being a stronger predictor than total Foxp3(+) Treg cells. These findings suggest an essential role for pDCs and ICOS-L in immunosuppression mediated by ICOS(+) Foxp3(+) Treg cells, leading to tumor progression in ovarian cancer.
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Insects associated with syconia of Ficus citrifolia in central Brazil. Fig trees present a diverse interaction with different groups of organisms. The inflorescence, or syconium, has characteristics that form a microenvironment in which interactions occur between fig trees and invertebrates. This study aimed to identify the insect fauna associated with the figs of Ficus citrifolia and to quantitatively describe the distribution pattern of the insects in the syconium, in an urban area in central Brazil. The syconia were used by 12 species of insects. Our results showed that the insects found on Ficus citrifolia presented a pattern of occurrence that depends on the composition of species found within each syconium.
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Increase in potency of adult stem/progenitor cells holds great expectations for regenerative medicine; reprogramming is achieved by manipulating the genome or indirectly by manipulating the microenvironment. However, the genetic approach, which can result in lineage conversion up to ground pluripotent embryonic state, will certainly face strict regulatory constraints and consequently translation to the clinic may be difficult. Manipulating stem cell fate without altering the genome of adult stem cells is a promising alternative. My laboratory has demonstrated that non hairy squamous epithelia e.g. the cornea, the oral cavity, the oesophagus, the vagina, contain clonogenic stem cells that can respond to skin morphogenetic signals and form epidermis, cycling hair follicles and sebaceous glands. This capacity is maintained in serial transplantation, crosses primary germ line boundaries and is intrinsic to the stem cells, as cells which have never been exposed to cell culture behave in a similar fashion. Even more surprising, the thymus contains a population of clonogenic epithelial cells of endodermal origin that maintain a thymic identity in culture and have the capacity to incorporate into a thymic network, but can acquire the functionality of bona fide multipotent stem cells of the skin when exposed to proper developmental signals. Thymic epithelial cells exposed to a skin microenvironment exhibit a down-regulation or silencing of transcription factors important for thymic function. Hence, it is possible to reveal unsuspected potency and even to robustly reprogram stem cells by solely manipulating the microenvironment.
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Abstract: Microbial mats very efficiently cycle elements, such as C, 0, N, S and H, which makes them key players of redox processes at the biosphere-lithosphere interface. They are characterized by high metabolic activities and high turnover rates (production and consumption) of biomass, which mainly consists of cell material and of extracellular organic matter (EOM). The EOM forms a matrix, embedding the microbial cells and fulfilling various functions within the microbial mat, including: mat attachment to surfaces; creation of micro-domains within the mat; physical stabilization under hy- drodynamic stress and the protection of the cells in multiple other stress conditions. EOM mainly consists of polysaccharides, amino acids, and a variety of chemical func-tional groups {e.g., -C00H, - SH -OH). These groups strongly bind cations such as Ca2+ and Mg2+ and thus exert a strong control on carbonate mineral formation within the microbial mat. A feedback mechanism between community metabolisms, their prod¬ucts, and the surrounding physicochemical microenvironment thus influences the de¬gree of carbonate saturation favoring either carbonate precipitation or dissolution. We investigated the driving forces and mechanisms of microbialite formation in the Sari ne River, FR, Switzerland, the hypersaline lake, Big Pond, Bahamas and in labo¬ratory experiments. The two fundamentally different natural systems allowed us to compare the geochemical conditions and microbial metabolisms, necessary for car¬bonate formation in microbial mats. Although carbonates are oversaturated in both environments, precipitation does not occur on physicochemical substrates (i.e. out¬side the microbial mats). In the Sarine a high crystal nucleation threshold exceeds the carbonate saturation, despite the high carbonate alkalinity in the water column. Cyanobacterial photosynthesis strongly locally enhances the carbonate alkalinity, whereas the EOM attract and immobilize calcium, which increases the saturation state and finally leads to carbonate precipitation within the EOM (in this case the cyanobacterial sheath) as nucleation template. In Big Pond, the presence of calcium- chelating anions (i.e. sulfate) and EOM, as well as the presence of magnesium, lowers the calcium activity in the water column and mat, and thus inhibits carbonate pre¬cipitation. Coupled with other heterotrophic metabolisms, sulfate reduction uses the EOM as carbon source, degrading it. The resulting EOM consumption creates alkalin¬ity, releases calcium and consumes sulfate in mat-micro domains, which leads to the formation of carbonate layers at the top of the microbial mat. Résumé: Interface biosphère/lithosphère: médiation microbienne de la précipitation de CaC03 dans des environnements en eaux douces et hypersalines Les tapis microbiens engendrent une circulation très efficace des éléments, tels que C, 0, N, S et H, ce qui en fait des acteurs clé pour les processus d'oxydoréduction à l'inter¬face biosphère-lithosphère. Ils sont caractérisés par des taux élevés d'activité méta¬bolique, ainsi que par la production et la consommation de biomasse, principalement constituée de cellules microbiennes et de matière organique extracellulaire (MOE). Dans un tapis microbien, les cellules microbiennes sont enveloppées par une matrice de MOE qui a différentes fonctions dont l'attachement du tapis aux surfaces, la créa¬tion de micro-domaines dans le tapis, la stabilisation physique en situation de stress hydrodynamique, et la protection des cellules dans de multiples autres conditions de stress. La MOE se compose principalement de polysaccharides, d'acides aminés, et d'une variété de groupes fonctionnels chimiques (par exemple, COOH, -SH et -OH). Ces groupes se lient fortement aux cations, tels que Ca2+ et Mg2+, et exercent ainsi un contrôle fort sur la formation de CaC03 dans le tapis microbien. Un mécanisme de rétroaction, entre les métabolismes de la communauté microbienne, leurs produits, et le microenvironnement physico-chimique, influence le degré de saturation de car¬bonate, favorisant soit leur précipitation, soit leur dissolution. Nous avons étudié le moteur et les mécanismes de minéralisation dans des tapis de la Sarine, FR, Suisse et du lac hypersalin, Big Pond, aux Bahamas, ainsi que durant des expériences en laboratoire. Les deux systèmes naturels, fondamentalement dif¬férents, nous ont permis de comparer les conditions géochimiques et les métabolis¬mes nécessaires à la formation des carbonates dans des tapis microbiens. Bien que les carbonates soient sursaturés dans les deux environnements, la précipitation ne se produit pas sur des substrats physico-chimiques (en dehors du tapis microbien). Dans la Sarine, malgré un taux d'alcalinité élevé, les valeurs de seuil pour la nucléa- tion de carbonates sont plus hautes que la saturation du carbonate. La photosynthèse cyanobactérienne augmente localement l'alcalinité, alors que la MOE attire et immo¬bilise le calcium, ce qui augmente l'état de saturation et conduit finalement à la pré¬cipitation des carbonates, en utilisant la MOE comme substrat de nucléation. À Big Pond, la présence de chélateurs de calcium, notamment les anions (p.ex. le sulfate) et la MOE, ainsi que la présence de magnésium, réduit l'activité du calcium et inhibe en conséquence la précipitation des carbonates. Couplée avec d'autres métabolismes hétérotrophes, la réduction des sulfates utilise la MOE comme source de carbone, en la dégradant. Cette consommation de MOE crée l'alcalinité, consomme des sulfates et libère du calcium dans des micro-domaines, conduisant à la formation de couches de carbonates dans le haut du tapis microbien.