988 resultados para Tolerance mechanisms


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There is currently no approved neuroprotective pharmacotherapy for acute conditions such as stroke and cerebral asphyxia. One of the reasons for this may be the multiplicity of cell death mechanisms, because inhibition of a particular mechanism leaves the brain vulnerable to alternative ones. It is therefore essential to understand the different cell death mechanisms and their interactions. We here review the multiple signaling pathways underlying each of the three main morphological types of cell death - apoptosis, autophagic cell death and necrosis - emphasizing their importance in the neuronal death that occurs during cerebral ischemia and hypoxia-ischemia, and we analyze the interactions between the different mechanisms. Finally, we discuss the implications of the multiplicity of cell death mechanisms for the design of neuroprotective strategies.

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The adrenergic receptors (ARs) belong to the superfamily of membrane-bound G protein coupled receptors (GPCRs). Our investigation has focused on the structure-function relationship of the alpha 1b-AR subtype used as the model system for other GPCRs. Site-directed mutagenesis studies have elucidated the structural domains of the alpha 1b-AR involved in ligand binding, G protein coupling or desensitization. In addition, a combined approach using site-directed mutagenesis and molecular dynamics analysis of the alpha 1b-AR has provided information about the potential mechanisms underlying the activation process of the receptor, i.e. its transition from the 'inactive' to the 'active' conformation.

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The non-obese diabetic (NOD) mouse is a model for the study of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM). Recently transgenic NOD mice have been derived (NOD-E) that express the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II I-E molecule. NOD-E do not become diabetic and show negligible pancreatic insulitis. The possibility pertained that NOD-E mice are protected from disease by a process of T-cell deletion or anergy. This paper describes our attempts to discover whether this was so, by comparing NOD and NOD-E mouse T-cell receptor V beta usage. Splenocytes and lymph node cells were therefore tested for their ability to proliferate in response to monoclonal anti-V beta antibodies. We were unable to show any consistent differences between NOD and NOD-E responses to the panel of antibodies used. Previously proposed V beta were shown to be unlikely candidates for deletion or anergy. T cells present at low frequency (V beta 5+) in both NOD and NOD-E mice were shown to be as capable of expansion in response to antigenic stimulation as were more frequently expressed V beta. Our data therefore do not support deletion or anergy as mechanisms which could account for the observed disease protection in NOD-E mice.

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Antifungal therapy failure can be associated with increased resistance to the employed antifungal agents. Candida glabrata, the second most common cause of invasive candidiasis, is intrinsically less susceptible to the azole class of antifungals and accounts for 15% of all Candida bloodstream infections. Here, we show that C. glabrata MED2 (CgMED2), which codes for a tail subunit of the RNA polymerase II Mediator complex, is required for resistance to azole antifungal drugs in C. glabrata. An inability to transcriptionally activate genes encoding a zinc finger transcriptional factor, CgPdr1, and multidrug efflux pump, CgCdr1, primarily contributes to the elevated susceptibility of the Cgmed2Δ mutant toward azole antifungals. We also report for the first time that the Cgmed2Δ mutant exhibits sensitivity to caspofungin, a constitutively activated protein kinase C-mediated cell wall integrity pathway, and elevated adherence to epithelial cells. The increased adherence of the Cgmed2Δ mutant was attributed to the elevated expression of the EPA1 and EPA7 genes. Further, our data demonstrate that CgMED2 is required for intracellular proliferation in human macrophages and modulates survival in a murine model of disseminated candidiasis. Lastly, we show an essential requirement for CgMed2, along with the Mediator middle subunit CgNut1 and the Mediator cyclin-dependent kinase/cyclin subunit CgSrb8, for the high-level fluconazole resistance conferred by the hyperactive allele of CgPdr1. Together, our findings underscore a pivotal role for CgMed2 in basal tolerance and acquired resistance to azole antifungals.

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SUMMARYAstrocytes represent the largest cell population in the human brain. In addition to a well established role as metabolic support for neuronal activity, in the last years these cells have been found to accomplish other important and, sometimes, unexpected functions. The tight enwrapping of synapses by astrocytic processes and the predominant expression of glutamate uptake carriers in the astrocytic rather than neuronal plasma membranes brought to the definition of a critical involvement of astrocytes in the clearance of glutamate from synaptic junctions. Moreover, several publications showed that astrocytes are able to release chemical transmitters (gliotransmitters) suggesting their active implication in the control of synaptic functions. Among gliotransmitters, the best characterized is glutamate, which has been proposed to be released from astrocytes in a Ca2+ dependent manner via exocytosis of synaptic-like microvesicles.In my thesis I present results leading to substantial advancement of the understanding of the mechanisms by which astrocytes modulate synaptic activity in the hippocampus, notably at excitatory synapses on dentate granule cells. I show that tumor necrosis factor- alpha (TNFa), a molecule that is generally involved in immune system functions, critically controls astrocyte-to-synapse communication (gliotransmission) in the brain. With constitutive levels of TNFa present, activation of purinergic G protein-coupled receptors in astrocytes, called P2Y1 receptors, induces localized intracellular calcium ([Ca2+]j) elevation in astrocytic processes (measured by two-photon microscopy) followed by glutamate release and activation of pre-synaptic NMDA receptors resulting in synaptic potentiation. In preparations lacking TNFa, astrocytes respond with identical [Ca2+]i elevations but fail to induce neuromodulation. I find that TNFa specifically controls the glutamate release step of gliotransmission. Addition of very low (picomolar) TNFa concentrations to preparations lacking the cytokine, promptly reconstitutes both normal exocytosis in cultured astrocytes and gliotransmission in hippocampal slices. These data provide the first demonstration that gliotransmission and its synaptic effects are controlled not only by astrocyte [Ca2+]i elevations but also by permissive/homeostatic factors like TNFa.In addition, I find that higher and presumably pathological TNFa concentrations do not act just permissively but instead become direct and potent triggers of glutamate release from astrocytes, leading to a strong enhancement of excitatory synaptic activity. The TNFa action, like the one observed upon P2Y1R activation, is mediated by pre-synaptic NMDA receptors, but in this case the effect is long-lasting, and not reversible. Moreover, I report that a necessary molecular target for this action of TNFa is TNFR1, one of the two specific receptors for the cytokine, as I found that TNFa was unable to induce synaptic potentiation when applied in slices from TNFR1 knock-out (Tnfrlv") mice. I then created a double transgenic mouse model where TNFR1 is knocked out in all cells but can be re-expressed selectively in astrocytes and I report that activation of the receptors in these cells is sufficient to reestablish TNFa-dependent long-lasting potentiation of synaptic activity in the TNFR1 knock-out mice.I therefore discovered that TNFa is a primary molecule displaying both permissive and instructive roles on gliotransmission controlling synaptic functions. These reports might have profound implications for the understanding of both physiological and pathological processes associated to TNFa production, including inflammatory processes in the brain.RÉSUMÉLes astrocytes sont les cellules les plus abondantes du cerveau humain. Outre leur rôle bien établi dans le support métabolique de l'activité neuronale, d'autres fonctions importantes, et parfois inattendues de ces cellules ont été mises en lumière au cours de ces dernières années. Les astrocytes entourent étroitement les synapses de leurs fins processus qui expriment fortement les transporteurs du glutamate et permettent ainsi aux astrocytes de jouer un rôle critique dans l'élimination du glutamate de la fente synaptique. Néanmoins, les astrocytes semblent être capables de jouer un rôle plus intégratif en modulant l'activité synaptique, notamment par la libération de transmetteurs (gliotransmetteurs). Le gliotransmetteur le plus étudié est le glutamate qui est libéré par l'exocytose régulée de petites vésicules ressemblant aux vésicules synaptiques (SLMVs) via un mécanisme dépendant du calcium.Les résultats présentés dans cette thèse permettent une avancée significative dans la compréhension du mode de communication de ces cellules et de leur implication dans la transmission de l'information synaptique dans l'hippocampe, notamment des synapses excitatrices des cellules granulaires du gyrus dentelé. J'ai pu montrer que le « facteur de nécrose tumorale alpha » (TNFa), une cytokine communément associée au système immunitaire, est aussi fondamentale pour la communication entre astrocyte et synapse. Lorsqu'un niveau constitutif très bas de TNFa est présent, l'activation des récepteurs purinergiques P2Y1 (des récepteurs couplés à protéine G) produit une augmentation locale de calcium (mesurée en microscopie bi-photonique) dans l'astrocyte. Cette dernière déclenche ensuite une libération de glutamate par les astrocytes conduisant à l'activation de récepteurs NMDA présynaptiques et à une augmentation de l'activité synaptique. En revanche, dans la souris TNFa knock-out cette modulation de l'activité synaptique par les astrocytes n'est pas bien qu'ils présentent toujours une excitabilité calcique normale. Nous avons démontré que le TNFa contrôle spécifiquement l'exocytose régulée des SLMVs astrocytaires en permettant la fusion synchrone de ces vésicules et la libération de glutamate à destination des récepteurs neuronaux. Ainsi, nous avons, pour la première fois, prouvé que la modulation de l'activité synaptique par l'astrocyte nécessite, pour fonctionner correctement, des facteurs « permissifs » comme le TNFa, agissant sur le mode de sécrétion du glutamate astrocytaire.J'ai pu, en outre, démontrer que le TNFa, à des concentrations plus élevées (celles que l'on peut observer lors de conditions pathologiques) provoque une très forte augmentation de l'activité synaptique, agissant non plus comme simple facteur permissif mais bien comme déclencheur de la gliotransmission. Le TNFa provoque 1'activation des récepteurs NMD A pré-synaptiques (comme dans le cas des P2Y1R) mais son effet est à long terme et irréversible. J'ai découvert que le TNFa active le récepteur TNFR1, un des deux récepteurs spécifiques pour le TNFa. Ainsi, l'application de cette cytokine sur une tranche de cerveau de souris TNFR1 knock-out ne produit aucune modification de l'activité synaptique. Pour vérifier l'implication des astrocytes dans ce processus, j'ai ensuite mis au point un modèle animal doublement transgénique qui exprime le TNFR1 uniquement dans les astrocytes. Ce dernier m'a permis de prouver que l'activation des récepteurs TNFR1 astrocytaires est suffisante pour induire une augmentation de l'activité synaptique de manière durable.Nous avons donc découvert que le TNFa possède un double rôle, à la fois un rôle permissif et actif, dans le contrôle de la gliotransmission et, par conséquent, dans la modulation de l'activité synaptique. Cette découverte peut potentiellement être d'une extrême importance pour la compréhension des mécanismes physiologiques et pathologiques associés à la production du TNFa, en particulier lors de conditions inflammatoires.RÉSUMÉ GRAND PUBLICLes astrocytes représentent la population la plus nombreuse de cellules dans le cerveau humain. On sait, néanmoins, très peu de choses sur leurs fonctions. Pendant très longtemps, les astrocytes ont uniquement été considérés comme la colle du cerveau, un substrat inerte permettant seulement de lier les cellules neuronales entre elles. Il n'y a que depuis peu que l'on a découvert de nouvelles implications de ces cellules dans le fonctionnement cérébral, comme, entre autres, une fonction de support métabolique de l'activité neuronale et un rôle dans la modulation de la neurotransmission. C'est ce dernier aspect qui fait l'objet de mon projet de thèse.Nous avons découvert que l'activité des synapses (régions qui permettent la communication d'un neurone à un autre) qui peut être potentialisée par la libération du glutamate par les astrocytes, ne peut l'être que dans des conditions astrocytaires très particulières. Nous avons, en particulier, identifié une molécule, le facteur de nécrose tumorale alpha (TNFa) qui joue un rôle critique dans cette libération de glutamate astrocytaire.Le TNFa est surtout connu pour son rôle dans le système immunitaire et le fait qu'il est massivement libéré lors de processus inflammatoires. Nous avons découvert qu'en concentration minime, correspondant à sa concentration basale, le TNFa peut néanmoins exercer un rôle indispensable en permettant la communication entre l'astrocyte et le neurone. Ce mode de fonctionnement est assez probablement représentatif d'un processus physiologique qui permet d'intégrer la communication astrocyte/neurone au fonctionnement général du cerveau. Par ailleurs, nous avons également démontré qu'en quantité plus importante, le TNFa change son mode de fonctionnement et agit comme un stimulateur direct de la libération de glutamate par l'astrocyte et induit une activation persistante de l'activité synaptique. Ce mode de fonctionnement est assez probablement représentatif d'un processus pathologique.Nous sommes également arrivés à ces conclusions grâce à la mise en place d'une nouvelle souche de souris doublement transgéniques dans lesquelles seuls les astrocytes (etnon les neurones ou les autres cellules cérébrales) sont capables d'être activés par le TNFa.

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Genotypic and phenotypic tolerance was studied in penicillin treatment of experimental endocarditis due to nontolerant and tolerant Streptococcus gordonii and to their backcross transformants. The organisms were matched for in vitro and in vivo growth rates. Rats with aortic endocarditis were treated for 3 or 5 days, starting 12, 24, or 48 h after inoculation. When started at 12 h, during fast intravegetation growth, 3 days of treatment cured 80% of the nontolerant parent compared with <30% of the tolerant derivative (P < .005). When started at 24 or 48 h and if intravegetation growth had reached a plateau, 3 days of treatment failed against both bacteria. However, a significant difference between the 2 organisms was restored when treatment was extended to 5 days. Thus, genotypic tolerance conferred a survival advantage in both fast- and slow-growing bacteria, demonstrating that the in vitro-defined tolerant phenotype also carried the risk of treatment failure in vivo.

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Human Ag-specific CD8(+) T lymphocytes are heterogeneous and include functionally distinct populations. In this study, we report that at least two distinct mechanisms control the expansion of circulating naive, memory, and effector CD8(+) T lymphocytes when exposed to mitogen or Ag stimulation. The first one leads to apoptosis and occurs shortly after in vitro stimulation. Susceptibility to cell death is prominent among primed T cell subsets, and it is inversely correlated with the size of the ex vivo Bcl-2(high) population within these subsets. Importantly, the Bcl-2(high) phenotype is associated to the proportion of responsive CD8(+) T cells, independently of their differentiation stage. The second one depends on the expression of newly synthesized cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p16(INK4a) that occurs in a significant fraction of T cells that had been actively cycling, leading to their cell cycle arrest upon stimulation. Strikingly, accumulation of p16(INK4a) protein preferentially occurs in naive as opposed to primed derived T lymphocytes and is not related to apoptosis. Significant levels of p16 are readily detectable in a small number of ex vivo CD8(+) T cells. Our observations reveal that activation-induced p16 expression represents an alternative process to apoptosis, limiting the proliferation potential of activated naive derived T lymphocytes.

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Main developmental programs are highly conserved among species of the animal kingdom. Improper execution of these programs often leads to progression of various diseases and disorders. Here we focused on Drosophila wing tissue morphogenesis, a fairly complex developmental program, one of the steps of which - apposition of the dorsal and ventral wing sheets during metamorphosis - is mediated by integrins. Disruption of this apposition leads to wing blistering which serves as an easily screenable phenotype for components regulating this process. By means of RNAi-silencing technique and the blister phenotype as readout, we identify numerous novel proteins potentially involved in wing sheet adhesion. Remarkably, our results reveal not only participants of the integrin-mediated machinery, but also components of other cellular processes, e.g. cell cycle, RNA splicing, and vesicular trafficking. With the use of bioinformatics tools, these data are assembled into a large blisterome network. Analysis of human orthologues of the Drosophila blisterome components shows that many disease-related genes may contribute to cell adhesion implementation, providing hints on possible mechanisms of these human pathologies.

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Many complex systems may be described by not one but a number of complex networks mapped on each other in a multi-layer structure. Because of the interactions and dependencies between these layers, the state of a single layer does not necessarily reflect well the state of the entire system. In this paper we study the robustness of five examples of two-layer complex systems: three real-life data sets in the fields of communication (the Internet), transportation (the European railway system), and biology (the human brain), and two models based on random graphs. In order to cover the whole range of features specific to these systems, we focus on two extreme policies of system's response to failures, no rerouting and full rerouting. Our main finding is that multi-layer systems are much more vulnerable to errors and intentional attacks than they appear from a single layer perspective.

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The literature on developmental synaesthesia has seen numerous sensory combinations, with surprisingly few reports on synaesthesias involving affect. On the one hand, emotion, or more broadly affect, might be of minor importance to the synaesthetic experience (e.g. Sinke et al., 2012). On the other hand, predictions on how affect could be relevant to the synaesthetic experience remain to be formulated, in particular those that are driven by emotion theories. In this theoretical paper, we hypothesize that a priori studies on synaesthesia involving affect will observe the following. Firstly, the synaesthetic experience is not merely about discrete emotion processing or overall valence (positive, negative) but is determined by or even altered through cognitive appraisal processes. Secondly, the synaesthetic experience changes temporarily on a quantitative level according to i) the affective appraisal of the inducing stimulus or ii) the current affective state of the individual. These hypotheses are inferred from previous theoretical and empirical accounts on synaesthesia (including the few examples involving affect), different emotion theories, crossmodal processing accounts in synaesthetes and nonsynaesthetes, and the presumed stability of the synaesthetic experience. We hope that the current review will succeed in launching a new series of studies on "affective synaesthesias". We particularly hope that such studies will apply the same creativity in experimental paradigms as we have seen and still see when assessing and evaluating "traditional" synaesthesias.

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Despite improving standards of care, people with diabetes remain at risk of development and progression of diabetic retinopathy (DR) and visual impairment. Identifying novel therapeutic approaches, preferably targeting more than one pathogenic pathway in DR, and at an earlier stage of disease, is attractive. There is now consistent evidence from two major trials, the Fenofibrate Intervention and Event Lowering in Diabetes (FIELD) study and the Action to Control Cardiovascular Risk in Diabetes Eye (ACCORD-Eye) study, totalling 11,388 people with type 2 diabetes (5,701 treated with fenofibrate) that fenofibrate reduces the risk of development and progression of DR. Therefore, fenofibrate may be considered a preventive strategy for patients without DR or early intervention strategy for those with mild DR. A number of putative therapeutic mechanisms for fenofibrate, both dependent and independent of lipids, have been proposed. A deeper understanding of the mode of action of fenofibrate will further help to define how best to use fenofibrate clinically as an adjunct to current management of DR.

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A variety of stress situations may affect the activity and survival of plant-beneficial pseudomonads added to soil to control root diseases. This study focused on the roles of the sigma factor AlgU (synonyms, AlgT, RpoE, and sigma(22)) and the anti-sigma factor MucA in stress adaptation of the biocontrol agent Pseudomonas fluorescens CHA0. The algU-mucA-mucB gene cluster of strain CHA0 was similar to that of the pathogens Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Pseudomonas syringae. Strain CHA0 is naturally nonmucoid, whereas a mucA deletion mutant or algU-overexpressing strains were highly mucoid due to exopolysaccharide overproduction. Mucoidy strictly depended on the global regulator GacA. An algU deletion mutant was significantly more sensitive to osmotic stress than the wild-type CHA0 strain and the mucA mutant were. Expression of an algU'-'lacZ reporter fusion was induced severalfold in the wild type and in the mucA mutant upon exposure to osmotic stress, whereas a lower, noninducible level of expression was observed in the algU mutant. Overexpression of algU did not enhance tolerance towards osmotic stress. AlgU was found to be essential for tolerance of P. fluorescens towards desiccation stress in a sterile vermiculite-sand mixture and in a natural sandy loam soil. The size of the population of the algU mutant declined much more rapidly than the size of the wild-type population at soil water contents below 5%. In contrast to its role in pathogenic pseudomonads, AlgU did not contribute to tolerance of P. fluorescens towards oxidative and heat stress. In conclusion, AlgU is a crucial determinant in the adaptation of P. fluorescens to dry conditions and hyperosmolarity, two major stress factors that limit bacterial survival in the environment.

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Synaptic plasticity involves a complex molecular machinery with various protein interactions but it is not yet clear how its components give rise to the different aspects of synaptic plasticity. Here we ask whether it is possible to mathematically model synaptic plasticity by making use of known substances only. We present a model of a multistable biochemical reaction system and use it to simulate the plasticity of synaptic transmission in long-term potentiation (LTP) or long-term depression (LTD) after repeated excitation of the synapse. According to our model, we can distinguish between two phases: first, a "viscosity" phase after the first excitation, the effects of which like the activation of NMDA receptors and CaMKII fade out in the absence of further excitations. Second, a "plasticity" phase actuated by an identical subsequent excitation that follows after a short time interval and causes the temporarily altered concentrations of AMPA subunits in the postsynaptic membrane to be stabilized. We show that positive feedback is the crucial element in the core chemical reaction, i.e. the activation of the short-tail AMPA subunit by NEM-sensitive factor, which allows generating multiple stable equilibria. Three stable equilibria are related to LTP, LTD and a third unfixed state called ACTIVE. Our mathematical approach shows that modeling synaptic multistability is possible by making use of known substances like NMDA and AMPA receptors, NEM-sensitive factor, glutamate, CaMKII and brain-derived neurotrophic factor. Furthermore, we could show that the heteromeric combination of short- and long-tail AMPA receptor subunits fulfills the function of a memory tag.

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Dendritic cells (DCs) are leukocytes specialised in the uptake, processing, and presentation of antigen and fundamental in regulating both innate and adaptive immune functions. They are mainly localised at the interface between body surfaces and the environment, continuously scrutinising incoming antigen for the potential threat it may represent to the organism. In the respiratory tract, DCs constitute a tightly enmeshed network, with the most prominent populations localised in the epithelium of the conducting airways and lung parenchyma. Their unique localisation enables them to continuously assess inhaled antigen, either inducing tolerance to inoffensive substances, or initiating immunity against a potentially harmful pathogen. This immunological homeostasis requires stringent control mechanisms to protect the vital and fragile gaseous exchange barrier from unrestrained and damaging inflammation, or an exaggerated immune response to an innocuous allergen, such as in allergic asthma. During DC activation, there is upregulation of co-stimulatory molecules and maturation markers, enabling DC to activate naïve T cells. This activation is accompanied by chemokine and cytokine release that not only serves to amplify innate immune response, but also determines the type of effector T cell population generated. An increasing body of recent literature provides evidence that different DC subpopulations, such as myeloid DC (mDC) and plasmacytoid DC (pDC) in the lungs occupy a key position at the crossroads between tolerance and immunity. This review aims to provide the clinician and researcher with a summary of the latest insights into DC-mediated pulmonary immune regulation and its relevance for developing novel therapeutic strategies for various disease conditions such as infection, asthma, COPD, and fibrotic lung disease.