937 resultados para Function and mobility
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OBJECTIVES: The goal was to test 2 hypotheses: first, that coronary endothelial function can be measured noninvasively and abnormal function detected using clinical 3.0-T magnetic resonance imaging (MRI); and second, that the extent of local coronary artery disease (CAD), in a given patient, is related to the degree of local abnormal coronary endothelial function. BACKGROUND: Abnormal endothelial function mediates the initiation and progression of atherosclerosis and predicts cardiovascular events. However, direct measures of coronary endothelial function have required invasive assessment. METHODS: The MRI was performed in 20 healthy adults and 17 patients with CAD. Cross-sectional coronary area and blood flow were quantified before and during isometric handgrip exercise, an endothelial-dependent stressor. In 10 severe, single-vessel CAD patients, paired endothelial function was measured in the artery with severe stenosis and the contralateral artery with minimal disease. RESULTS: In healthy adults, coronary arteries dilated and flow increased with stress. In CAD patients, coronary artery area and blood flow decreased with stress (both p </= 0.02). In the paired study, coronary artery area and blood flow failed to increase during exercise in the mildly diseased vessel, but both area (p = 0.01) and blood flow (p = 0.02) decreased significantly in the severely diseased, contralateral artery. CONCLUSIONS: Endothelial-dependent coronary artery dilation and increased blood flow in healthy subjects, and their absence in CAD patients, can now be directly visualized and quantified noninvasively. Local coronary endothelial function differs between severely and mildly diseased arteries in a given CAD patient. This novel, safe method may offer new insights regarding the importance of local coronary endothelial function and improved risk stratification in patients at risk for and with known CAD.
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PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Definition of T cell immune correlates in HIV infection remains a lofty goal towards our understanding of the HIV-specific immune response. This review will focus upon recent developments and controversies in our understanding of protective T cell responses against HIV. RECENT FINDINGS: It has become clear that multiple functions and phenotypic markers of T cells must be assessed to accurately characterize the complexity of CD4 and CD8 T cell responses. While evidence indicates that a hallmark of protective immune responses in HIV infection is the presence of 'polyfunctional' T cell responses, a disconnect remains between the function and phenotype of effective HIV-specific T cells. Moreover, there may be inherent differences in the ability of specific human leukocyte antigen class I families to promote CD8 T cell effector versus polyfunctional responses. It remains to be determined how polyfunctional responses arise in HIV infection, which functions are important for control, and whether surface phenotype markers provide an indication of protective capacity. SUMMARY: Polyfunctional and phenotypic assessment of T cell responses have clearly advanced our understanding of HIV specific immune responses. Critical questions remain, however, especially whether polyfunctional T cell responses control, or are controlled by, HIV replication.
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CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells (Tregs) play a critical role in the prevention of autoimmune diseases as well as in the induction and maintenance of dominant tolerance in transplantation models. While their suppressive function has been extensively studied in vitro, their homeostasis and mechanisms of immunoregulation still remain to be clarifi ed in vivo. Using a murine adoptive transfer and skin allograft model, we analysed the expansion, effector function and traffi cking of effector T cells in the presence or absence of donor-specifi c Tregs. Although hyporesponsive to allogeneic and polyclonal stimulation in vitro, transferred Tregs survived and expanded, in response to an allograft in vivo. When co-transferred with naive CD4+CD25- effector T cells, they specifi cally prevented donor but not 3rd party allograft rejection by inhibiting the production of effector cytokines rather than the proliferation of effector T cells in response to alloantigens. The co-transfer of donor-specifi c Tregs did not affect the homing of effector T cells towards the graft draining lymph nodes, but it markedly reduced the infi ltration of the allograft by these pathogenic cells. Furthermore, in recipients where donor-specifi c transplantation tolerance was induced, Tregs preferentially accumulated in the allograft draining lymph nodes and within the grafted skin itself. Taken together, our results suggest that the suppression of graft rejection is an active process that involves the persistent presence of Tregs at the site of antigenic challenge.
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Notch proteins regulate a broad spectrum of cell fate decisions and differentiation processes during fetal and postnatal development. Mammals have four Notch receptors that bind five different ligands. The function of Notch signaling during lymphopoiesis and T cell neoplasia, based on gain-of-function and conditional loss-of-function approaches for the Notch1 receptor, indicates Notch1 is essential in T cell lineage commitment. Recent studies have addressed the involvement of other Notch receptors and ligands as well as their downstream targets, demonstrating additional functions of Notch signaling in embryonic hematopoiesis, intrathymic T cell development, B cell development and peripheral T cell function.
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The matching function -a key building block in models of labor market frictions- impliesthat the job finding rate depends only on labor market tightness. We estimate such amatching function and find that the relation, although remarkably stable over 1967-2007,broke down spectacularly after 2007. We argue that labor market heterogeneities are notfully captured by the standard matching function, but that a generalized matching functionthat explicitly takes into account worker heterogeneity and market segmentation is fullyconsistent with the behavior of the job finding rate. The standard matching function canbreak down when, as in the Great Recession, the average characteristics of the unemployedchange too much, or when dispersion in labor market conditions -the extent to which somelabor markets fare worse than others- increases too much.
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1. SUMMARY Based on functional and homing properties, two subsets of memory T lymphocytes have been defined both in humans and in mice. Central memory T cells (TCM cells) express the lymph node homing receptors CD62L and CCR7, have poor effector function and proliferate efficiently upon antigenic stimulation. Effector memory T cells (TEM cells) do not express CCR7, are mostly CD62L negative and therefore are excluded from lymph nodes, but are able to migrate to sites of inflammation where they exert immediate effector function by producing inflammatory cytokines and cytotoxic mediators. In the present work we have addressed two questions that emerged since the definition of TCM and TEM cells. Firstly, what are the priming conditions for generation of TCM and TEM and, secondly, what is the migratory capacity of TCM and TEM cells in inflammatory conditions. By using naive TCR-transgenic OT-I CD8+ T cells and OT-II CD4+ T cells and ovalbumin pulsed-mature dendritic cells (DCs) we set up an in vitro system in which the strength of T cell stimulation is controlled by varying the ratio of T cells and DCs and the duration of DC-T cell interaction. Using this system we found that precursors of TCM and TEM cells are generated at different strength of stimulation and that T cells capable of persisting in vivo in the absence of antigen and of mounting recall responses is optimally induced by intermediate stimulatory strength. In addition, we found that lymph nodes draining sites of mature DC or adjuvant inoculation recruit CD8+ CD62L- CCR7- effector and TEM cells. CD8+ T cell recruitment in reactive lymph nodes requires CXCR3 expression on T cells and occurs through high endothelial venules (HEVs) in concert with HEV lurninal expression of the CXCR3 ligand CXCL9. In reactive lymph nodes, recruited T cells establish stable interactions with and kill antigen-bearing DCs, limiting the ability of these DCs to activate CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. Taken togther these data define conditions for the generation of TCM and TEM cells and define an inflammatory pathway of effector T cell migration in lymph nodes. The inducible recruitment of blood-borne effector and TEM CD8+ cells to lymph nodes may represent a mechanism for terminating primary and limiting secondary immune responses.
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Natural Killer (NK) cells are innate immune cells that can eliminate malignant and foreign cells and that play an important role for the early control of viral and fungal infections. Further, they are important regulators of the adaptive and innate immune responses. During their development in the bone marrow (BM) NK cells undergo several maturation steps that directly establish an effector program. The transcriptional network that controls NK cell development and maturation is still incompletely understood. Based on earlier findings that NK cell numbers are reduced in the absence of the transcription factor T cell factor-1 (Tcf-1), my thesis has addressed the precise role of this transcription factor for NK cell development, maturation and function and whether Tcf-1 acts as a nuclear effector of the canonical Wnt signaling pathway to mediate its effects. It is shown that Tcf-1 is selectively required for the emergence of mature BM NK cells. Surprisingly, the emergence of BM NK cells depends on the repressor function of Tcf-1 and is independent of the Wnt pathway. In BM and peripheral NK cells Tcf-1 is found to suppress Granzyme B (GzmB) expression, a key cytotoxic effector molecule required to kill target cells. We provide evidence that GzmB over-expression in the absence of Tcf-1 results in accelerated spontaneous death of bone marrow NK cells and of cytokine stimulated peripheral NK cells. Moreover, Tcf-1 deficient NK cells show reduced target cell killing, which is due to enhanced GzmB-dependent NK cell death induced by the recognition of tumour target cells. Collectively, these data provide significant new insights into the transcriptional regulation of NK cell development and function and suggest a novel mechanism that protects NK cells from the deleterious effects of highly cytotoxic effector molecules. - Les cellules NK (de l'anglais Natural Killer) font partie du système immunitaire inné et sont capables d'éliminer à elles seules les cellules cancéreuses ou infectées. Ces cellules participent dans la régulation et la coordination des réponses innée et adaptative. Lors de leur développement dans la moelle osseuse, les cellules NK vont acquérir leurs fonctions effectrices, un processus contrôlé par des facteurs de transcription mais encore peu connu. Des précédentes travaux ont montré qu'une diminution du nombre de cellules NK corrélait avec l'absence du facteur de transcription Tcf-1 (T cell factor-1), suggérant un rôle important de Tcf-1 dans le développement de cellules NK. Cette thèse a pour but de mieux comprendre le rôle du facteur de transcription Tcf-1 lors du développement et la maturation des cellules NK, ainsi que son interaction avec la voie de signalisation Wnt. Nous avons montré que Tcf-1 est essentiel pour la transition des cellules immatures NK (iNK) à des cellules matures NK (mNK) dans la moelle osseuse, et cela de manière indépendamment de la voie de signalisation Wnt. De manière intéressante, nous avons observé qu'en absence du facteur de transcription Tcf-1, les cellules NK augmentaient l'expression de la protéine Granzyme B (GzmB), une protéine essentielle pour l'élimination des cellules cancéreuses ou infectées. Ceci a pour conséquence, une augmentation de la mort des cellules mNK dans la moelle osseuse ainsi qu'une diminution de leur fonction «tueuses». Ces résultats montrent pour la première fois, le rôle répresseur du facteur de transcription Tcf-1 dans l'expression de la protéine GzmB. L'ensemble de ces résultats apporte de nouveaux éléments concernant le rôle de Tcf-1 dans la régulation du développement et de la fonction des cellules NK et suggèrent un nouveau mécanisme cellulaire de protection contre les effets délétères d'une dérégulation de l'expression des molécules cytotoxique.
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PURPOSE: We preoperatively assessed neurovesical function and spinal cord function in children with anorectal malformations. In cases of neurovesical dysfunction we looked for an association with vertebral malformation or myelodysplasia. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We prospectively evaluated 80 children with anorectal malformations via preoperative urodynamics and magnetic resonance imaging of the spine. Bladder compliance and volume, detrusor activity and vesicosphincteric synergy during voiding allowed urodynamic evaluation. Results were reported according to Wingspread and Krickenbeck classifications of anorectal malformations. RESULTS: Urodynamic findings were pathological in 14 children (18%). Pathological evaluations did not seem related to type of fistula or level of anorectal malformation. Vertebral anomalies were seen in 34 patients (43%) and myelodysplasia in 16 (20%). Neither vertebral anomaly nor myelodysplasia seemed associated with type of fistula or severity of anorectal malformation. Of 14 children with pathological urodynamics no vertebral anomaly or myelodysplasia was found in 7. Of 66 children with normal urodynamics 40 presented with vertebral or spinal malformation. CONCLUSIONS: Lower urinary tract dysfunction is common in patients with anorectal malformations. Normal spine or spinal cord does not exclude neurovesical dysfunction. Myelodysplasia or vertebral anomaly does not determine lower urinary tract dysfunction. Thus, we recommend preoperative urodynamic assessment of the bladder and magnetic resonance imaging of the spine in children with anorectal malformations.
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Background: Graft right ventricular (RV) function is compromised directly posttransplant, especially in heart transplantation (HTx) recipients with pretransplant pulmonary hypertension (PH). Graft RV size and systolic function, and the effect of the recipient's pulmonary haemodynamics on the graft extracellular matrix are not well characterised in the patients long-term after HTx. Aim: Comparison of RV size and systolic function in HTx recipients' long-term posttransplant stratified by the presence of pretransplant PH. Methods: HTx survivors >/=2 years posttransplant were divided into group I without pretransplant PH (pulmonary vascular resistance, PVR <2.5Wood units, n=37) and group II with PH (PVR >/=2.5Wood units, n=16). RV size and systolic function were measured using cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR). The collagen content was assessed in septal endomyocardial biopsies obtained at HTx and at study inclusion. Results: Mean posttransplant follow-up was 5.2+/-2.9 years (group I) and 4.9+/-2.2 years (group II) (p=0.70). PVR was 1.5+/-0.6 vs 4.1+/-1.7Wood units pretransplant (p<0.001), and 1.2+/-0.5 vs 1.3+/-0.5Wood units at study inclusion (p=0.43). Allograft RV size and systolic function were similar in both groups (p always >/=0.07). Collagen content at transplantation and at follow-up were not different (p always >/=0.60). Conclusion: Posttransplant normalisation of pretransplant PH is associated with normal graft RV function long-term after HTx.
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Life on earth is rhythmic by essence due to day/night alternation, and many biological processes are also cyclic. The kidney has a special role in the organism, controlling electrolytes and water balance, blood pressure, elimination of metabolic waste and xenobiotics and the production of several hormones. The kidney is submitted to changes throughout 24 h with periods of intense activity followed by calmer periods. Filtration, reabsorption and secretion are the three components determining renal function. Here, we review circadian changes related to glomerular function and proteinuria and emphasize the role of the clock in these processes.
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The epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) in the apical membrane of polarized epithelial cells is the rate-limiting step for Na entry into the cell; in series with the basolateral Na pump, it allows the vectorial transepithelial transport of Na ions. ENaC is expressed in different epithelia like the distal nephron or colon, and the airways epithelium. In the lung ENaC controls the composition and the amount of pulmonary fluid, whereas in the distal nephron ENaC under the control of aldosterone and vasopressin, is essential to adapt the amount of Na+ reabsorbed with the daily sodium intake. Activating mutations of ENaC cause severe disturbances of Na+ homeostasis leading to hypertension in human and in mouse models. Functional expression of ENaC in different cell systems allowed the identification of structural domains of the protein that are essential for channel function and/or modulation of channel activity. Site-directed mutations in specific domains of the channel protein lead to channel hyperactivity or channel loss of function. Knowledge about ENaC structure-function relationships opens new opportunities for development of pharmacological tools for controlling ENaC activity, such as channel activators of potential benefit in the treatment of pulmonary edema, or highly potent ENaC blockers with natriuretic effects.
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The aim of the paper is to describe some of the challenges faced by schools, or by formal education in general, as a consequence of today"s mobilecentric society (henceforth MCS), the term we will use to denote the new, networked learning ecology that has arisen from the massive penetration of digital media in everyday life. After revisiting some of the ideas of McLuhan and Vygotsky in the light of this new technological scenario, we describe five traits of the MCS and the challenges illustrated through educational practices that we believe schools will face if they wish to preserve their function of individualization and socialization. We believe that despite the emergence of the MCS, the main function of the school is still to provide the"box of tools" (a set of psychological instruments, such as reading, writing, mathematical notation, digital literacy, etc.) that enables people to develop their learning skills and life projects and to become part of communities and groups. However, the complexity and mobility of the new learning environments means that the position held by schools needs to be reevaluated in the face of the informal learning paths and experiences both online and offline to which learners now have access. We also need to reevaluate the meaning of the school itself as an institution and the model of learner it should be training
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Aims: The aims were to create clinically feasible reference intervals for thyroidstimulating hormone (TSH) and free thyroxine (FT4) and to analyze associations between thyroid function and self-rated health, neuropsychiatric symptoms, depression and dementia in the elderly. The second aim was also to establish reference intervals for sex hormones and to analyze associations between sex hormone levels and self-rated health, symptoms, depression and dementia in elderly men. Subjects and methods: The study population comprised 1252 subjects aged 65 years or over, living in the municipality of Lieto, south-western Finland. Self-rated health, life satisfaction, symptoms, depression, and dementia were assessed with specific questions, clinical examination and tools such as the Zung Self-report Depression Scale and the Mini-Mental State Examination. Independent variables were dichotomized, and associations of these variables with TSH, FT4 or sex hormone levels were assessed. Levels of TSH and FT4 in thyroid disease–free women and women treated with thyroxine were also compared. Results: Elevated concentrations of thyroid peroxidase antibodies (TPOAb) or thyroglobulin antibodies (TgAb) were found to have a marked effect on the upper reference limit for TSH among women, who were thyroid antibody positive more higher than suggested in several recent guidelines. After age adjustment, there were no associations between TSH levels and self-rated health, life satisfaction, or most neuropsychiatric symptoms in the thyroid disease-free population. Although women with thyroxine treatment for primary hypothyroidism had far higher TSH levels than thyroid disease-free women, there were no differences between thyroid-disease free women and women with stable thyroxine treatment regarding self-rated health, life satisfaction or symptoms. Age had a significant positive association with luteinizing hormone (LH), follicle 2 practice, one range in men aged 65 years or over can be used for T, E2 and FSH measured with the AutoDelfia method, but two separate reference intervals should be used for fT, LH and SHBG. After adjustment for age, higher levels of T and fT were associated with better self-rated health (SRH) in the reference population. After adjustment for age and body mass index (BMI), there were no associations between sex hormone concentrations and self-rated health, life satisfaction or most symptoms in concentration. Conclusion: Age-specific reference intervals were derived for thyroid function and sex hormones based on comprehensive data from a community-dwelling population with a high participation rate. The results do not support the need to decrease the upper reference limit for TSH or to lower the optimal TSH target in levothyroxine treatment in older adults, as recommended in recent guidelines. Older age or being overweight symptoms among elderly men. The associations of single symptoms with T levels were inconsistent among elderly men, although the association of low T level with diagnosed depression might be clinically significant.
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Regular aerobic exercise training, which is touted as a way to ameliorate metabolic diseases, increases aerobic capacity. Aerobic capacity usually declines with advanced age. The decline in aerobic capacity is typically associated by a decrease in the quality of skeletal muscle. At the molecular level, this decreased quality comes in part from perturbations in skeletal muscle mitochondria. Of particular is a decrease in the total amount of mitochondria that occupy the skeletal muscle volume. What is not well established is if this decrease in mitochondrial content is due to inactive lifestyle or the process of aging. Herein, the work of the thesis shows a clear connection between mitochondrial content and aerobic capacity. This indicates that active individuals with higher VChmax levels also contain higher volumes of mitochondria inside their muscle as opposed to sedentary counterparts who have lower levels of mitochondrial content. Upon taking these previously sedentary individuals and entering them into an aerobic exercise intervention, they are able to recover their mitochondrial content as well as function to similar levels of lifelong athletes of the same age. Furthermore, the results of this thesis show that mitochondrial content and function also correlate with exercise efficiency. If one is more efficient, he/she is able to expend less energy for a similar power output. Furthermore, individuals who increase in efficiency also increase in the ability to oxidize and utilize fat during pro-longed exercise. This increased reliance on fat after the intervention is associated with an increased amount of mitochondria, particularly in the intermyofibrillar region of skeletal muscle. Therefore, elderly adults who were once sedentary were able to recover mitochondrial content and function and are able to reap other health benefits from regular aerobic exercise training. Aging per se does not seem to be the culprit that will lead to metabolic diseases but rather it seems to be a lack of physical activity. -- Un entraînement sportif d'endurance, connu pour réduire le risque de développer des maladies métaboliques, augmente notre capacité aérobie. La capacité aérobie diminue généralement avec l'âge. Ce déclin est typiquement associé d'une diminution de la qualité du muscle squelettique. Au niveau moléculaire, cette diminution est due à des perturbations dans les mitochondries du muscle squelettique,, ce qui conduit à une diminution de la quantité totale des mitochondries présentes dans le muscle squelettique. Il n'a pas encore été établi si cette diminution de la teneur mitochondriale est due à un mode de vie sédentaire ou au processus du vieillissement. Ce travail de thèse montre un lien clair entre le contenu mitochondrial et la capacité aérobie. Il indique que des personnes âgées actives, avec des niveaux de V02max plus élevés, possèdent également un volume plus élevé de mitochondries dans leurs muscles en comparaison à leurs homologues sédentaires. En prenant des individus sédentaires et leur faisant pratiquer une activité physique aérobie, il est possible d'accroître leur contenu de même que leur fonction mitochondriale à des niveaux similaires à ceux d'athlètes du même âge ayant pratiqué une activité physique tout au long de leur vie. De plus, les résultats de ce travail démontrent que le contenu et la fonction mitochondriale sont en corrélation avec l'efficiscience lors d'exercice physique. En agumentant l'effiscience, les personnes sont alors capables de dépenser moins d'énergie pour une puissance d'exercice similaire. Donc, un volume mitochondrial accru dans le muscle squelettique, associé à une fonction mitochondriale améliorée, est associté à une augmentation de l'effiscience. En outre, les personnes qui augmentent leur effiscience, augmentent aussi leur capacité à oxyder les graisses durant l'exercice prolongé. Une augmentation du recours au graisses après l'intervention est associée à une quantité accrue de mitochondries, en particulier dans la région inter-myofibrillaire du muscle squelettique. Par conséquent, les personnes âgées autrefois sédentaires sont en mesure de récupérer leur contenu et leur fonction mitochondriale ainsi que d'autres avantages pour la santé grâce à un entraînement aérobie régulier. Le vieillissement en soi ne semble donc pas être le coupable conduisant aux maladies métaboliques qui semblent plutôt être lié à un manque d'activité physique.
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Osteoclasts are multinucleated bone degrading cells. Phosphate is an important constituent of mineralized bone and released in significant quantities during bone resorption. Molecular contributors to phosphate transport during the resorptive activity of osteoclasts have been controversially discussed. This study aimed at deciphering the role of sodium-dependent phosphate transporters during osteoclast differentiation and bone resorption. Our studies reveal RANKL-induced differential expression of sodium-dependent phosphate transport protein IIa (NaPi-IIa) transcript and protein during osteoclast development, but no expression of the closely related NaPi-IIb and NaPi-IIc SLC34 family isoforms. In vitro studies employing NaPi-IIa-deficient osteoclast precursors and mature osteoclasts reveal that NaPi-IIa is dispensable for bone resorption and osteoclast differentiation. These results are supported by the analysis of structural bone parameters by high-resolution microcomputed tomography that yielded no differences between adult NaPi-IIa WT and KO mice. By contrast, both type III sodium-dependent phosphate transporters Pit-1 and Pit-2 were abundantly expressed throughout osteoclast differentiation, indicating that they are the relevant sodium-dependent phosphate transporters in osteoclasts and osteoclast precursors. We conclude that phosphate transporters of the SLC34 family have no role in osteoclast differentiation and function and propose that Pit-dependent phosphate transport could be pivotal for bone resorption and should be addressed in further studies.