943 resultados para Particle-in-cell simulations
Resumo:
Abstract : Transcriptional regulation is the result of a combination of positive and negative effectors, such as transcription factors, cofactors and chromatin modifiers. During my thesis project I studied chromatin association, and transcriptional and cell cycle regulatory functions of dHCF, the Drosophila homologue of the human protein HCF-1 (host cell factor-1). The human and Drosophila HCF proteins are synthesized as large polypeptides that are cleaved into two subunits (HCFN and HCFC), which remain associated with one another by non covalent interactions. Studies in mammalian cells over the past 20 years have been devoted to understanding the cellular functions of HCF-1 and have revealed that it is a key regulator of transcription and cell cycle regulation. In human cells, HCF-1 interacts with the histone methyltransferase Set1/Ash2 and MLL/Ash2 complexes and the histone deacetylase Sin3 complex, which are involved in transcriptional activation and repression, respectively. HCF-1 is also recruited to promoters to regulate G1 -to-S phase progression during the cell cycle by the activator transcription factors E2F1 and E2F3, and by the repressor transcription factor E2F4. HCF-1 protein structure and these interactions between HCP-1 and E2F transcriptional regulator proteins are also conserved in Drosophila. In this doctoral thesis, I use proliferating Drosophila SL2 cells to study both the genomic-binding sites of dHCF, using a combination of chromatin immunoprecipitation and ultra high throughput sequencing (ChIP-seq) analysis, and dHCF regulated genes, employing RNAi and microarray expression analysis. I show that dHCF is bound to over 7500 chromosomal sites in proliferating SL2 cells, and is located at +-200 bp relative to the transcriptional start sites of about 30% of Drosophila genes. There is also a direct relationship between dHCF promoter association and promoter- associated transcriptional activity. Thus, dHCF binding levels at promoters correlated directly with transcriptional activity. In contrast, expression studies showed that dHCF appears to be involved in both transcriptional activation and repression. Analysis of dHCF-binding sites identified nine dHCF-associated motifs, four of them linked dHCF to (i) two insulator proteins, GAGA and BEAF, (ii) the E-box motif, and (iii) a degenerated TATA-box. The dHCF-associated motifs allowed the organization of the dHCF-bound genes into five biological processes: differentiation, cell cycle and gene expression, regulation of endocytosis, and cellular localization. I further show that different mechanisms regulate dHCF association with chromatin. Despite that after dHCF cleavage the dHCFN and dHCFC subunits remain associated, the two subunits showed different affinities for chromatin and differential binding to a set of tested promoters, suggesting that dHCF could target specific promoters through each of the two subunits. Moreover, in addition to the interaction between dHCF and E2F transcription factors, the dHCF binding pattern is correlated with dE2F2 genomic 4 distribution. I show that dE2F factors are necessary for recruitment of dHCF to the promoter of a set of dHCF regulated genes. Therefore dHCF, as in mammals, is involved in regulation of G1 to S phase progression in collaboration with the dE2Fs transcription factors. In addition, gene expression arrays reveal that dHCF could indirectly regulate cell cycle progression by promoting expression of genes involved in gene expression and protein synthesis, and inhibiting expression of genes involved in cell-cell adhesion. Therefore, dHCF is an evolutionary conserved protein, which binds to many specific sites of the Drosophila genome via interaction with DNA of chromatin-binding proteins to regulate the expression of genes involved in many different cellular functions. Résumé : La regulation de la transcription est le résultat des effets positifs et négatifs des facteurs de transcription, cofacteurs et protéines effectrices qui modifient la chromatine. Pendant mon projet de thèse, j'ai étudié l'association a la chromatine, ainsi que la régulation de la transcription et du cycle cellulaire par dHCF, l'homologue chez la drosophile de la protéine humaine HCF-1 (host cell factor-1). Chez 1'humain et la V drosophile, les deux protéines HCF sont synthétisées sous la forme d'un long polypeptide, qui est ensuite coupé en deux sous-unités au centre de la protéine. Les deux sous-unités restent associées ensemble grâce a des interactions non-covalentes. Des études réalisées pendant les 20 dernières années ont permit d'établir que HCF-l et un facteur clé dans la régulation de la transcription et du cycle cellulaire. Dans les cellules humaines, HCF-1 active et réprime la transcription en interagissant avec des complexes de protéines qui activent la transcription en méthylant les histones (HMT), comme par Set1/Ash2 et MLL/Ash2, et d'autres complexes qui répriment la transcription et sont responsables de la déacétylation des histones (HDAC) comme la protéine Sin3. HCF-l est aussi recruté aux promoteurs par les activateurs de la transcription E2F l et E2F3a, et par le répresseur de la transcription E2F4 pour réguler la transition entre les phases G1 et S du cycle cellulaire. La structure de HCF-1 et les interactions entre HCF-l et les régulateurs de la transcription sont conservées chez la drosophile. Pendant ma these j'ai utilisé les cellules de la drosophile, SL2 en culture, pour étudier les endroits de liaisons de HCF-l à la chromatine, grâce a immunoprecipitation de la chromatine et du séquençage de l'ADN massif ainsi que les gènes régulés par dHCF 3 grâce a la technique de RNAi et des microarrays. Mes résultats on montré que dHCF se lie à environ 7565 endroits, et estimé a 1200 paire de bases autour des sites d'initiation de la transcription de 30% des gènes de la drosophile. J 'ai observe une relation entre dHCF et le niveau de la transcription. En effet, le niveau de liaison dHCF au promoteur corrèle avec l'activité de la transcription. Cependant, mes études d'expression ont montré que dHCF est implique dans le processus d'activation et mais aussi de répression de la transcription. L'analyse des séquences d'ADN liées par dHCF a révèle neuf motifs, quatre de ces motifs ont permis d'associer dl-ICF a deux protéines isolatrices GAGA et BEAF, au motif pour les E-boxes et a une TATA-box dégénérée. Les neuf motifs associes à dHCF ont permis d'associer les gènes lies par dHCF au promoteur a cinq processus biologiques: différentiation, cycle cellulaire, expression de gènes, régulation de l'endocytosis et la localisation cellulaire, J 'ai aussi montré qu'il y a plusieurs mécanismes qui régulent l'association de dHCF a la chromatine, malgré qu'après clivage, les deux sous-unites dHCFN and dHCFC, restent associées, elles montrent différentes affinités pour la chromatine et lient différemment un group de promoteurs, les résultats suggèrent que dHCF peut se lier aux promoteurs en utilisant chacune de ses sous-unitées. En plus de l'association de dHCF avec les facteurs de transcription dE2F s, la distribution de dHCF sur le génome corrèle avec celle du facteur de transcription dE2F2. J'ai aussi montré que les dE2Fs sont nécessaires pour le recrutement de dHCF aux promoteurs d'un sous-groupe de gènes régules par dHCF. Mes résultats ont aussi montré que chez la drosophile comme chez les humains, dl-ICF est implique dans la régulation de la progression de la phase G1 a la phase S du cycle cellulaire en collaboration avec dE2Fs. D'ailleurs, les arrays d'expression ont suggéré que dHCF pourrait réguler le cycle cellulaire de façon indirecte en activant l'expression de gènes impliqués dans l'expression génique et la synthèse de protéines, et en inhibant l'expression de gènes impliqués dans l'adhésion cellulaire. En conclusion, dHCF est une protéine, conservée dans l'évolution, qui se lie spécifiquement a beaucoup d'endroits du génome de Drosophile, grâce à l'interaction avec d'autres protéines, pour réguler l'expression des gènes impliqués dans plusieurs fonctions cellulaires.
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In the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes, hyperglycemia appears when ß cell mass and insulin secretory capacity are no longer sufficient to compensate for insulin resistance. The reduction in ß cell mass results from increased apoptosis. Therefore, finding strategies to preserve ß cell mass and function may be useful for the treatment or prevention of diabetes. Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) protects ß cells against apoptosis, increases their glucose competence, and induces their proliferation. Previous studies in the lab of Prof. Bernard Thorens showed that the GLP-1 anti- apoptotic effect was mediated by robust up-regulation of IGF-1R expression, and this was paralleled with an increase in Akt phosphorylation. This effect was dependent not only on increased IGF-1R expression but also on the autocrine secretion of insulin-like growth factor 2 (IGF2). They also demonstrated that GLP-1 up-regulated IGF-1R expression by a protein a kinase A-dependent translational control mechanism. The main aim of this PhD work has been to further investigate the role of the IGF2/IGF-1 Receptor autocrine loop in ß cell function and to determine the physiological role of IGF2 in ß cell plasticity and its regulation by nutrients. This PhD thesis is divided in 3 chapters. The first chapter describes the role of IGF2/IGF-1R autocrine loop in ß cell glucose competence and proliferation. Here using MIN6 cells and primary mouse islets as an experimental model we demonstrated that the glucose competence of these cells was dependent on the level of IGF-1R expression and on IGF2 secretion. Furthermore, we showed that GLP-1-induced primary ß cell proliferation was significantly reduced by Igf-lr gene inactivation and by IGF2 immunoneutralization or knockdown. In the second chapter we examined the role of this IGF2/IGF-1R autocrine loop on the ß cell functional plasticity during ageing, pregnancy, and in response to acute induction of insulin resistance using mice with ß cell-specific inactivation of ig/2. Here we showed a gender-dependent role of ß cell IGF2 in ageing and high fat diet-induced metabolic stress; we demonstrated that the autocrine secretion of IGF2 is essential for ß cell mass adaptation during pregnancy. Further we also showed that this autocrine loop plays an important role in ß cell expansion in response to acute induction of insulin resistance. The aim of the third chapter was to investigate whether we can modulate the expression and secretion of IGF2 by nutrients in order to increase the activity of autocrine loop. Here we showed that glutamine induces IGF2 biosynthesis and its fast secretion through the regulated pathway, a mechanism enhanced in the presence of glucose. Furthermore, we demonstrated that glutamine-mediated Akt phosphorylation is dependent on IGF2 secretion, indicating that glutamine controls the activity of the IGF2/IGF1R autocrine loop through IGF2 up-regulation. In summary, this PhD work highlights that autocrine secretion of IGF2 is required for compensatory ß cell adaptation to ageing, pregnancy, and insulin resistance. Moreover IGF2/IGF1R autocrine loop is regulated by two feeding-related cues, GLP-1 to increase IGF-1R expression and glutamine to control IGF2 biosynthesis and secretion. -- Dans le diabète de type 2, lorsque la sécrétion d'insuline des cellules Beta du pancréas n'est plus suffisante pour compenser la résistance à l'insuline, une hyperglycémie est observée. Cette baisse de sécrétion d'insuline est Causée par la diminution de la masse de cellules Beta suite à l'augmentation du phénomène de mort cellulaire ou « apoptose ». En diabétologie, une des stratégies médicales concerne la préservation des cellules Beta du pancréas. Une des protéines intervenant dans cette fonction est GLP-1 (Glucagon-like peptide-1). GLP-1 est capable de protéger les cellules Beta contre la mort cellulaire et d'induire leur prolifération. Des études précédemment menées dans le laboratoire du Professeur Bernard Thorens ont montrées que l'activité « anti-apoptotique » de GLP-1 est le résultat l'une augmentation de l'expression du gène IGF-1R sous la dépendance de la sécrétion autocrine d'IGF2 (Insulin-Like Growth Factor). Le but de mon travail de thèse aura été d'étudier le mécanisme de la régulation de GLP-1 par IGF2 et plus précisément de déterminer le rôle physiologique d'IGF2 dans la plasticité des cellules ß ainsi que sa régulation par les nutriments. Ce manuscrit est ainsi divisé en trois chapitres : Le premier chapitre décrit la fonction d'IGF2/IGF- R1 dans la réponse des cellules Beta au glucose ainsi que dans leur capacité à proliférer. Dans ce chapitre nous avons montré l'importance du niveau d'expression d'IGFR-1 et de la sécrétion d'IGF2 dans la régulation du métabolisme du glucose. Dans un deuxième chapitre, nous étudions la boucle de régulation IGF2/IGF-R1 sur la plasticité des cellules Beta lors du vieillissement, de la grossesse ainsi que dans un modèle de souris résistantes à l'insuline. Cette étude met en évidence un dimorphisme sexuel dans le rôle d'IGF2 lors du vieillissement et lors d'un stress métabolique. Nous montrons également l'importance d'IGF2 pour l'adaptation des cellules Beta tout au long de la grossesse ou lors du phénomène de résistance à l'insuline. Dans un troisième chapitre, nous mettons en évidence la possibilité de moduler l'expression et la sécrétion d'IGF2 par les nutriments. En conclusion, ce travail de thèse aura permis de mettre en évidence l'importance d'IGF2 dans la plasticité des cellules ß, une plasticité indispensable lors du vieillissement, de la grossesse ou encore dans le cas d'une résistance à l'insuline.
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We consider noncentered vortices and their arrays in a cylindrically trapped Bose-Einstein condensate at zero temperature. We study the kinetic energy and the angular momentum per particle in the Thomas-Fermi regime and their dependence on the distance of the vortices from the center of the trap. Using a perturbative approach with respect to the velocity field of the vortices, we calculate, to first order, the frequency shift of the collective low-lying excitations due to the presence of an off-center vortex or a vortex array, and compare these results with predictions that would be obtained by the application of a simple sum-rule approach, previously found to be very successful for centered vortices. It turns out that the simple sum-rule approach fails for off-centered vortices.
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Gradients of variation-or clines-have always intrigued biologists. Classically, they have been interpreted as the outcomes of antagonistic interactions between selection and gene flow. Alternatively, clines may also establish neutrally with isolation by distance (IBD) or secondary contact between previously isolated populations. The relative importance of natural selection and these two neutral processes in the establishment of clinal variation can be tested by comparing genetic differentiation at neutral genetic markers and at the studied trait. A third neutral process, surfing of a newly arisen mutation during the colonization of a new habitat, is more difficult to test. Here, we designed a spatially explicit approximate Bayesian computation (ABC) simulation framework to evaluate whether the strong cline in the genetically based reddish coloration observed in the European barn owl (Tyto alba) arose as a by-product of a range expansion or whether selection has to be invoked to explain this colour cline, for which we have previously ruled out the actions of IBD or secondary contact. Using ABC simulations and genetic data on 390 individuals from 20 locations genotyped at 22 microsatellites loci, we first determined how barn owls colonized Europe after the last glaciation. Using these results in new simulations on the evolution of the colour phenotype, and assuming various genetic architectures for the colour trait, we demonstrate that the observed colour cline cannot be due to the surfing of a neutral mutation. Taking advantage of spatially explicit ABC, which proved to be a powerful method to disentangle the respective roles of selection and drift in range expansions, we conclude that the formation of the colour cline observed in the barn owl must be due to natural selection.
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Abstract: The AU-rich elements (AREs) consisting of repeated AUUUA motifs confer rapid degradation to many cellular mRNAs when present in the 3' untranslated region (3'UTR). We have studied the instability of interleukin-6 mRNA by grafting its 3' untranslated region to a stable green fluorescent protein mRNA. Subsequent scanning mutagenesis identified two conserved elements, which taken together account for most of the instability. The first corresponds to a short non-canonical AU-rich element. The other comprises a sequence predicted to form astern-loop structure. Both elements need to be present in order to confer full instability (Paschoud et al. 2006). Destabilization of ARE-containing mRNAs is thought to involve ARE-binding proteins such as AUF1. We tested whether AUF1 binding to interleukin-6 mRNA correlates with decreased mRNA stability. Overexpression of myc-tagged p37AUFl and p42AUF1 as well as suppression of all four AUF1 isoforms by RNA interference stabilized the interleukin-6 mRNA. Furthermore, the interleukin-6 mRNA co-immunoprecipitated specifically with myc-tagged p37AUF1 and p42AUF1 in cell extracts. Both the stabilization and AUF1-binding required the non-canonical AU-rich sequence. These results indicate that AUF1 binds to the AU-rich element in vivo and promotes interleukin6 mRNA degradation. The combination of mRNA co-immunoprecipitation with microarray technology revealed that at least 500 cellular mRNAs associate with AUF1. Résumé: "La présence d'éléments riches en A et U (ARE), en particulier les motifs répétés d'AUUUA dans la région 3' non traduite, confère une dégradation rapide à beaucoup d'ARN cellulaires. Nous avons étudié l'instabilité de l'ARN codant pour l'interleukine 6 en greffant sa région 3' non traduite à un ARN stable codant pour la protéine fluorescente verte. La mutagenèse systématique des séquences non traduites a permis l'identification de deux éléments conservés qui confèrent l'instabilité à l'ARN. Le premier correspond à un élément AU-riche non canonique court. Le second comporte une structure en 'épingle à cheveux'. Tous les deux éléments doivent être présents afin de conférer une instabilité complète (Paschoud et al. 2006). On pense que des protéines telles que AUF1, pouvant se lier aux éléments ARE, sont impliquées dans la dégradation des ARN messagers. Nous avons examiné si la liaison de AUFl sur l'ARN de l'interleukine 6 corrèle avec une stabilité diminuée. La surexpression des protéines p37AUF1 et de p42AUF1 myc-étiquetées ainsi que la suppression de chacun des quatre isoformes de AUF1 par interférence d'ARN a stabilisé l'ARN messager d'interleukine 6. En outre, cet ARN co-immunoprécipite spécifiquement avec p37AUF1 et p42AUF1 dans des extraits cellulaires. La présence de l'élément AUriche non canonique est nécessaire pour la stabilisation de l'ARN et sa liaison avec AUFI. Ces résultats indiquent qu'AUF1 se lie à l'élément AU-riche in vivo et favorise la dégradation de l'ARN messager d'interleukine 6. La combinaison des techniques de coimmunoprécipitation des ARN messagers et des analyses par `microarray' indique qu'au moins 500 ARN cellulaires s'associent à AUF1.
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Acacia mangium and Mimosa caesalpiniaefolia are fast-growing woody fabaceous species that might be suitable for phytoremediation of arsenic (As)-contaminated sites. To date, few studies on their tolerance to As toxicity have been published. Therefore, this study assessed As toxicity symptoms in A. mangium and M. caesalpiniaefolia seedlings under As stress in a greenhouse. Seedlings of Acacia mangium and M. caesalpiniaefolia were grown for 120 d in an Oxisol-sand mixture with 0, 50, 100, 200, and 400 mg kg-1 As, in four replications in four randomized blocks. The plants were assessed for visible toxicity symptoms, dry matter production, shoot/root ratio, root anatomy and As uptake. Analyses of variance and regression showed that the growth of A. mangium and M. caesalpiniaefolia was severely hindered by As, with a reduction in dry matter production of more than 80 % at the highest As rate. The root/shoot ratio increased with increasing As rates. At a rate of 400 mg kg-1 As, whitish chlorosis appeared on Mimosa caesalpiniaefolia seedlings. The root anatomy of both species was altered, resulting in cell collapse, death of root buds and accumulation of phenolic compounds. Arsenic concentration was several times greater in roots than in shoots, with more than 150 and 350 mg kg-1 in M. caesalpiniaefolia and A. mangium roots, respectively. These species could be suitable for phytostabilization of As-contaminated sites, but growth-stimulating measures should be used.
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After an injury, keratinocytes acquire the plasticity necessary for the reepithelialization of the wound. Here, we identify a novel pathway by which a nuclear hormone receptor, until now better known for its metabolic functions, potentiates cell migration. We show that peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor beta/delta (PPARbeta/delta) enhances two phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-dependent pathways, namely, the Akt and the Rho-GTPase pathways. This PPARbeta/delta activity amplifies the response of keratinocytes to a chemotactic signal, promotes integrin recycling and remodeling of the actin cytoskeleton, and thereby favors cell migration. Using three-dimensional wound reconstructions, we demonstrate that these defects have a strong impact on in vivo skin healing, since PPARbeta/delta-/- mice show an unexpected and rare epithelialization phenotype. Our findings demonstrate that nuclear hormone receptors not only regulate intercellular communication at the organism level but also participate in cell responses to a chemotactic signal. The implications of our findings may be far-reaching, considering that the mechanisms described here are important in many physiological and pathological situations.
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Pancreatic ß cells are highly specialized endocrine cells located within the islets of Langerhans in the pancreas. Their main role is to produce and secrete insulin, the hormone essential for the regulation of glucose homeostasis and body's metabolism. Diabetes mellitus develops when the amount of insulin released by ß cells is not sufficient to cover the metabolic demand. In type 1 diabetes (5-10% of diagnoses) insulin deficiency is caused by the autoimmune destruction of pancreatic ß cells. Type 2 diabetes (90% of diagnoses) results from a genetic predisposition and from the presence of adverse environmental conditions. The combination of these factors reduces insulin sensitivity of peripheral target tissues, causes impairment in ß-cell function and can lead to partial loss of ß cells. The development of novel therapeutic strategies for the treatment of diabetes necessitates the comprehension of the cellular processes involved in dysfunction and loss of ß cells. My thesis was focused on the involvement in the physiopathological processes leading to the development of diabetes of a class of small regulatory RNA molecules, called microRNAs (miRNAs) that post- transcriptionally regulate gene expression. Global miRNA profiling in pancreatic islets of two animal models of diabetes, the db/db mice and mice that were fed a high fat diet (HFD), characterized by obesity and insulin resistance, led us to identify two groups of miRNAs displaying expression changes under pre-diabetic and diabetic conditions. Among the miRNAs already upregulated in pre-diabetic db/db mice and HFD mice, miR- 132 was found to have beneficial effects on pancreatic ß cell function and survival. Indeed, mimicking the upregulation of miR-132 in primary pancreatic islet cells and ß-cell lines improved glucose- induced insulin secretion and favored survival of the cells upon exposure to pro-apoptotic stimuli such as palmitate and cytokines. MiR-132 was found to exert its action by enhancing the expression of MafA, a transcription factor essential for ß-cell function, survival and identity. On the other hand, up-regulation of miR-199a-5p and miR-199a-3p was detectable only in the islets of diabetic db/db mice and resulted in impaired insulin secretion and sensitization of the cells to apoptosis. MiR-199a- 5p was found to decrease insulin secretion by inducing the expression of granuphilin, a potent inhibitor of ß cell exocytosis. In contrast, miR-199a-3p was demonstrated to directly target and reduce the expression of two key ß-cell genes, mTOR and cMET, resulting in impaired ß-cell adaptation to metabolic demands and loss by apoptosis. Our findings suggest that miRNAs are important players in the onset of type 2 diabetes. MiRNA expression is adjusted in pancreatic ß cells exposed to a diabetogenic environment. These changes initially concern miRNAs responsible for adaptive processes aimed at compensating the onset of insulin resistance, but later such changes can be overlapped by modifications in the level of several additional miRNAs that favor ß-cell failure and the onset of type 2 diabetes.
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The structure of polydisperse hard sphere fluids, in the presence of a wall, is studied by the Rosenfeld density functional theory. Within this approach, the local excess free energy depends on only four combinations of the full set of density fields. The case of continuous polydispersity thereby becomes tractable. We predict, generically, an oscillatory size segregation close to the wall, and connect this, by a perturbation theory for narrow distributions, with the reversible work for changing the size of one particle in a monodisperse reference fluid.
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An exact analytical expression for the effective diffusion coefficient of an overdamped Brownian particle in a tilted periodic potential is derived for arbitrary potentials and arbitrary strengths of the thermal noise. Near the critical tilt (threshold of deterministic running solutions) a scaling behavior for weak thermal noise is revealed and various universality classes are identified. In comparison with the bare (potential-free) thermal diffusion, the effective diffusion coefficient in a critically tilted periodic potential may be, in principle, arbitrarily enhanced. For a realistic experimental setup, an enhancement by 14 orders of magnitude is predicted so that thermal diffusion should be observable on a macroscopic scale at room temperature.
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Mitochondrial dysfunction is one of the possible mechanisms by which azole resistance can occur in Candida glabrata. Cells with mitochondrial DNA deficiency (so-called "petite mutants") upregulate ATP binding cassette (ABC) transporter genes and thus display increased resistance to azoles. Isolation of such C. glabrata mutants from patients receiving antifungal therapy or prophylaxis has been rarely reported. In this study, we characterized two sequential and related C. glabrata isolates recovered from the same patient undergoing azole therapy. The first isolate (BPY40) was azole susceptible (fluconazole MIC, 4 μg/ml), and the second (BPY41) was azole resistant (fluconazole MIC, >256 μg/ml). BPY41 exhibited mitochondrial dysfunction and upregulation of the ABC transporter genes C. glabrata CDR1 (CgCDR1), CgCDR2, and CgSNQ2. We next assessed whether mitochondrial dysfunction conferred a selective advantage during host infection by testing the virulence of BPY40 and BPY41 in mice. Surprisingly, even with in vitro growth deficiency compared to BPY40, BPY41 was more virulent (as judged by mortality and fungal tissue burden) than BPY40 in both systemic and vaginal murine infection models. The increased virulence of the petite mutant correlated with a drastic gain of fitness in mice compared to that of its parental isolate. To understand this unexpected feature, genome-wide changes in gene expression driven by the petite mutation were analyzed by use of microarrays during in vitro growth. Enrichment of specific biological processes (oxido-reductive metabolism and the stress response) was observed in BPY41, all of which was consistent with mitochondrial dysfunction. Finally, some genes involved in cell wall remodelling were upregulated in BPY41 compared to BPY40, which may partially explain the enhanced virulence of BPY41. In conclusion, this study shows for the first time that mitochondrial dysfunction selected in vivo under azole therapy, even if strongly affecting in vitro growth characteristics, can confer a selective advantage under host conditions, allowing the C. glabrata mutant to be more virulent than wild-type isolates.
Calcineurin-Mediated Regulation of Hyphal Growth, Septation, and Virulence in Aspergillus fumigatus.
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Calcineurin is a heterodimeric protein phosphatase complex composed of catalytic (CnaA) and regulatory (CnaB) subunits and plays diverse roles in regulating fungal stress responses, morphogenesis, and pathogenesis. Fungal pathogens utilize the calcineurin pathway to survive in the host environment and cause life-threatening infections. The immunosuppressive calcineurin inhibitors (FK506 and cyclosporine A) are active against fungi, making calcineurin a promising antifungal drug target. Here, we review novel findings on calcineurin localization and functions in Aspergillus fumigatus hyphal growth and septum formation through regulation of proteins involved in cell wall biosynthesis. Extensive mutational analysis in the functional domains of A. fumigatus CnaA has led to an understanding of the relevance of these domains for the localization and function of CnaA at the hyphal septum. An evolutionarily conserved novel mode of calcineurin regulation by phosphorylation in filamentous fungi was found to be responsible for virulence in A. fumigatus. This finding of a filamentous fungal-specific mechanism controlling hyphal growth and virulence represents a potential target for antifungal therapy.
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Hepatitis A virus (HAV), the prototype of genus Hepatovirus, has several unique biological characteristics that distinguish it from other members of the Picornaviridae family. Among these, the need for an intact eIF4G factor for the initiation of translation results in an inability to shut down host protein synthesis by a mechanism similar to that of other picornaviruses. Consequently, HAV must inefficiently compete for the cellular translational machinery and this may explain its poor growth in cell culture. In this context of virus/cell competition, HAV has strategically adopted a naturally highly deoptimized codon usage with respect to that of its cellular host. With the aim to optimize its codon usage the virus was adapted to propagate in cells with impaired protein synthesis, in order to make tRNA pools more available for the virus. A significant loss of fitness was the immediate response to the adaptation process that was, however, later on recovered and more associated to a re-deoptimization rather than to an optimization of the codon usage specifically in the capsid coding region. These results exclude translation selection and instead suggest fine-tuning translation kinetics selection as the underlying mechanism of the codon usage bias in this specific genome region. Additionally, the results provide clear evidence of the Red Queen dynamics of evolution since the virus has very much evolved to re-adapt its codon usage to the environmental cellular changing conditions in order to recover the original fitness.
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A model of a phase-separating two-component Langmuir monolayer in the presence of a photoinduced reaction interconverting two components is formulated. An interplay between phase separation, orientational ordering, and reaction is found to lead to a variety of nonequilibrium self-organized patterns, both stationary and traveling. Examples of the patterns, observed in numerical simulations, include flowing droplets, traveling stripes, wave sources, and vortex defects.
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Background: The hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS3-4A protease is not only an essential component of the viral replication complex and a prime target for a ntiviral intervention but also a key player i n the persistence and pathogenesis of HCV. It cleaves and thereby inactivates two crucial adaptor proteins in viral RNA sensing and innate immunity (MAVS and TRIF) as well as a phosphatase involved in growth factor signaling (TCPTP). T he aim of this study was to identify novel cellular substrates o f the N S3-4A protease and to investigate their role in the replication and pathogenesis of HCV. Methods: Cell lines inducibly expressing t he NS3-4A protease were analyzed in basal as well as interferon-α-stimulated states by stable isotopic l abeling using amino acids in cell culture (SILAC) coupled with protein separation and mass spectrometry. Candidates fulfilling stringent criteria for potential substrates or products of the NS3-4A protease were further i nvestigated in different experimental systems as well a s in liver biopsies from patients with chronic hepatitis C. Results: SILAC coupled with protein separation and mass spectrometry yielded > 5000 proteins of which 18 candidates were selected for further analyses. These allowed us to identify GPx8, a membrane-associated peroxidase involved in disulfide bond formation in the endoplasmic reticulum, as a n ovel cellular substrate of the H CV NS3-4A protease. Cleavage occurs at cysteine in position 11, removing the cytosolic tip of GPx8, and was observed in different experimental systems as well as in liver biopsies from patients with chronic hepatitis C. Further functional studies, involving overexpression and RNA silencing, revealed that GPx8 is a p roviral factor involved in viral particle production but not in HCV entry or HCV RNA replication. Conclusions: GPx8 is a proviral host factor cleaved by the HCV NS3-4A protease. Studies investigating the consequences of GPx8 cleavage for protein function are underway. The identification of novel cellular substrates o f the HCV N S3-4A protease should yield new insights i nto the HCV life cycle and the pathogenesis of hepatitis C and may reveal novel targets for antiviral intervention.