975 resultados para Vasoactive Metabolites
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To study the stress-induced effects caused by wounding under a new perspective, a metabolomic strategy based on HPLC-MS has been devised for the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. To detect induced metabolites and precisely localise these compounds among the numerous constitutive metabolites, HPLC-MS analyses were performed in a two-step strategy. In a first step, rapid direct TOF-MS measurements of the crude leaf extract were performed with a ballistic gradient on a short LC-column. The HPLC-MS data were investigated by multivariate analysis as total mass spectra (TMS). Principal components analysis (PCA) and hierarchical cluster analysis (HCA) on principal coordinates were combined for data treatment. PCA and HCA demonstrated a clear clustering of plant specimens selecting the highest discriminating ions given by the complete data analysis, leading to the specific detection of discrete-induced ions (m/z values). Furthermore, pool constitution with plants of homogeneous behaviour was achieved for confirmatory analysis. In this second step, long high-resolution LC profilings on an UPLC-TOF-MS system were used on pooled samples. This allowed to precisely localise the putative biological marker induced by wounding and by specific extraction of accurate m/z values detected in the screening procedure with the TMS spectra.
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Objectives: Acetate brain metabolism has the particularity to occur specifically in glial cells. Labeling studies, using acetate labeled either with 13C (NMR) or 11C (PET), are governed by the same biochemical reactions and thus follow the same mathematical principles. In this study, the objective was to adapt an NMR acetate brain metabolism model to analyse [1-11C]acetate infusion in rats. Methods: Brain acetate infusion experiments were modeled using a two-compartment model approach used in NMR.1-3 The [1-11C]acetate labeling study was done using a beta scintillator.4 The measured radioactive signal represents the time evolution of the sum of all labeled metabolites in the brain. Using a coincidence counter in parallel, an arterial input curve was measured. The 11C at position C-1 of acetate is metabolized in the first turn of the TCA cycle to the position 5 of glutamate (Figure 1A). Through the neurotransmission process, it is further transported to the position 5 of glutamine and the position 5 of neuronal glutamate. After the second turn of the TCA cycle, tracer from [1-11C]acetate (and also a part from glial [5-11C]glutamate) is transferred to glial [1-11C]glutamate and further to [1-11C]glutamine and neuronal glutamate through the neurotransmission cycle. Brain poster session: oxidative mechanisms S460 Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism (2009) 29, S455-S466 Results: The standard acetate two-pool PET model describes the system by a plasma pool and a tissue pool linked by rate constants. Experimental data are not fully described with only one tissue compartment (Figure 1B). The modified NMR model was fitted successfully to tissue time-activity curves from 6 single animals, by varying the glial mitochondrial fluxes and the neurotransmission flux Vnt. A glial composite rate constant Kgtg=Vgtg/[Ace]plasma was extracted. Considering an average acetate concentration in plasma of 1 mmol/g5 and the negligible additional amount injected, we found an average Vgtg = 0.08±0.02 (n = 6), in agreement with previous NMR measurements.1 The tissue time-activity curve is dominated by glial glutamate and later by glutamine (Figure 1B). Labeling of neuronal pools has a low influence, at least for the 20 mins of beta-probe acquisition. Based on the high diffusivity of CO2 across the blood-brain barrier; 11CO2 is not predominant in the total tissue curve, even if the brain CO2 pool is big compared with other metabolites, due to its strong dilution through unlabeled CO2 from neuronal metabolism and diffusion from plasma. Conclusion: The two-compartment model presented here is also able to fit data of positron emission experiments and to extract specific glial metabolic fluxes. 11C-labeled acetate presents an alternative for faster measurements of glial oxidative metabolism compared to NMR, potentially applicable to human PET imaging. However, to quantify the relative value of the TCA cycle flux compared to the transmitochondrial flux, the chemical sensitivity of NMR is required. PET and NMR are thus complementary.
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The ring sulfoxidation of thioridazine (THD), a widely used neuroleptic agent, yields two diastereoisomeric pairs, fast- and slow-eluting (FE and SE) thioridazine 5-sulfoxide (THD 5-SO). Until now, studies in which concentrations of these metabolites were measured in THD-treated patients have revealed no significant differences in their concentrations. Preliminary experiments in our laboratory had shown that sunlight and, to a lesser extent, dim daylight led to racemization and probably also to photolysis of the diastereoisomeric pairs as measured by high-performance liquid chromatography. Similar results were also obtained with direct UV light (UV lamp). In appropriate light-protected conditions, THD, northioridazine, mesoridazine, sulforidazine, and FE and SE THD 5-SO were measured in 11 patients treated with various doses of THD for at least 1 week. Significantly higher concentrations of the FE stereoisomeric pair were found. The concentration ratios THD 5-SO (FE)/THD 5-SO (SE) ranged from 0.89 to 1.75 in plasma and from 1.15 to 2.05 in urine. Because it is known that the ring sulfoxide contributes to the cardiotoxicity of the drug even more potently than the parent compound does, these results justify further studies to determine whether there is stereoselectivity in the cardiotoxicity of THD 5-SO.
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Peripheral nerve regeneration following injury occurs spontaneously, but many of the processes require metabolic energy. The mechanism of energy supply to axons has not previously been determined. In the central nervous system, monocarboxylate transporter 1 (MCT1), expressed in oligodendroglia, is critical for supplying lactate or other energy metabolites to axons. In the current study, MCT1 is shown to localize within the peripheral nervous system to perineurial cells, dorsal root ganglion neurons, and Schwann cells by MCT1 immunofluorescence in wild-type mice and tdTomato fluorescence in MCT1 BAC reporter mice. To investigate whether MCT1 is necessary for peripheral nerve regeneration, sciatic nerves of MCT1 heterozygous null mice are crushed and peripheral nerve regeneration was quantified electrophysiologically and anatomically. Compound muscle action potential (CMAP) recovery is delayed from a median of 21days in wild-type mice to greater than 38days in MCT1 heterozygote null mice. In fact, half of the MCT1 heterozygote null mice have no recovery of CMAP at 42days, while all of the wild-type mice recovered. In addition, muscle fibers remain 40% more atrophic and neuromuscular junctions 40% more denervated at 42days post-crush in the MCT1 heterozygote null mice than wild-type mice. The delay in nerve regeneration is not only in motor axons, as the number of regenerated axons in the sural sensory nerve of MCT1 heterozygote null mice at 4weeks and tibial mixed sensory and motor nerve at 3weeks is also significantly reduced compared to wild-type mice. This delay in regeneration may be partly due to failed Schwann cell function, as there is reduced early phagocytosis of myelin debris and remyelination of axon segments. These data for the first time demonstrate that MCT1 is critical for regeneration of both sensory and motor axons in mice following sciatic nerve crush.
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Background: Metabolic flux profiling based on the analysis of distribution of stable isotope tracer in metabolites is an important method widely used in cancer research to understand the regulation of cell metabolism and elaborate new therapeutic strategies. Recently, we developed software Isodyn, which extends the methodology of kinetic modeling to the analysis of isotopic isomer distribution for the evaluation of cellular metabolic flux profile under relevant conditions. This tool can be applied to reveal the metabolic effect of proapoptotic drug edelfosine in leukemia Jurkat cell line, uncovering the mechanisms of induction of apoptosis in cancer cells. Results: The study of 13C distribution of Jukat cells exposed to low edelfosine concentration, which induces apoptosis in ¿5% of cells, revealed metabolic changes previous to the development of apoptotic program. Specifically, it was found that low dose of edelfosine stimulates the TCA cycle. These metabolic perturbations were coupled with an increase of nucleic acid synthesis de novo, which indicates acceleration of biosynthetic and reparative processes. The further increase of the TCA cycle fluxes, when higher doses of drug applied, eventually enhance reactive oxygen species (ROS) production and trigger apoptotic program. Conclusion: The application of Isodyn to the analysis of mechanism of edelfosine-induced apoptosis revealed primary drug-induced metabolic changes, which are important for the subsequent initiation of apoptotic program. Initiation of such metabolic changes could be exploited in anticancer therapy.
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There is a need for more efficient methods giving insight into the complex mechanisms of neurotoxicity. Testing strategies including in vitro methods have been proposed to comply with this requirement. With the present study we aimed to develop a novel in vitro approach which mimics in vivo complexity, detects neurotoxicity comprehensively, and provides mechanistic insight. For this purpose we combined rat primary re-aggregating brain cell cultures with a mass spectrometry (MS)-based metabolomics approach. For the proof of principle we treated developing re-aggregating brain cell cultures for 48h with the neurotoxicant methyl mercury chloride (0.1-100muM) and the brain stimulant caffeine (1-100muM) and acquired cellular metabolic profiles. To detect toxicant-induced metabolic alterations the profiles were analysed using commercial software which revealed patterns in the multi-parametric dataset by principal component analyses (PCA), and recognised the most significantly altered metabolites. PCA revealed concentration-dependent cluster formations for methyl mercury chloride (0.1-1muM), and treatment-dependent cluster formations for caffeine (1-100muM) at sub-cytotoxic concentrations. Four relevant metabolites responsible for the concentration-dependent alterations following methyl mercury chloride treatment could be identified using MS-MS fragmentation analysis. These were gamma-aminobutyric acid, choline, glutamine, creatine and spermine. Their respective mass ion intensities demonstrated metabolic alterations in line with the literature and suggest that the metabolites could be biomarkers for mechanisms of neurotoxicity or neuroprotection. In addition, we evaluated whether the approach could identify neurotoxic potential by testing eight compounds which have target organ toxicity in the liver, kidney or brain at sub-cytotoxic concentrations. PCA revealed cluster formations largely dependent on target organ toxicity indicating possible potential for the development of a neurotoxicity prediction model. With such results it could be useful to perform a validation study to determine the reliability, relevance and applicability of this approach to neurotoxicity screening. Thus, for the first time we show the benefits and utility of in vitro metabolomics to comprehensively detect neurotoxicity and to discover new biomarkers.
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Certain autoimmune diseases as well as asthma have increased in recent decades, particularly in developed countries. The hygiene hypothesis has been the prevailing model to account for this increase; however, epidemiology studies also support the contribution of diet and obesity to inflammatory diseases. Diet affects the composition of the gut microbiota, and recent studies have identified various molecules and mechanisms that connect diet, the gut microbiota, and immune responses. Herein, we discuss the effects of microbial metabolites, such as short chain fatty acids, on epithelial integrity as well as immune cell function. We propose that dysbiosis contributes to compromised epithelial integrity and disrupted immune tolerance. In addition, dietary molecules affect the function of immune cells directly, particularly through lipid G-protein coupled receptors such as GPR43.
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In the plant-beneficial, root-colonizing strain Pseudomonas fluorescens CHA0, the Gac/Rsm signal transduction pathway positively regulates the synthesis of biocontrol factors (mostly antifungal secondary metabolites) and contributes to oxidative stress response via the stress sigma factor RpoS. The backbone of this pathway consists of the GacS/GacA two-component system, which activates the expression of three small regulatory RNAs (RsmX, RsmY, RsmZ) and thereby counters translational repression exerted by the RsmA and RsmE proteins on target mRNAs encoding biocontrol factors. We found that the expression of typical biocontrol factors, that is, antibiotic compounds and hydrogen cyanide (involving the phlA and hcnA genes), was significantly lower at 35 degrees C than at 30 degrees C. The expression of the rpoS gene was affected in parallel. This temperature control depended on RetS, a sensor kinase acting as an antagonist of the GacS/GacA system. An additional sensor kinase, LadS, which activated the GacS/GacA system, apparently did not contribute to thermosensitivity. Mutations in gacS or gacA were epistatic to (that is, they overruled) mutations in retS or ladS for expression of the small RNAs RsmXYZ. These data are consistent with a model according to which RetS-GacS and LadS-GacS interactions shape the output of the Gac/Rsm pathway and the environmental temperature influences the RetS-GacS interaction in P. fluorescens CHA0.
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Pseudomonas fluorescens CHA0 produces several secondary metabolites, e.g., the antibiotics pyoluteorin (Plt) and 2,4-diacetylphloroglucinol (Phl), which are important for the suppression of root diseases caused by soil-borne fungal pathogens. A Tn5 insertion mutant of strain CHA0, CHA625, does not produce Phl, shows enhanced Plt production on malt agar, and has lost part of the ability to suppress black root rot in tobacco plants and take-all in wheat. We used a rapid, two-step cloning-out procedure for isolating the wild-type genes corresponding to those inactivated by the Tn5 insertion in strain CHA625. This cloning method should be widely applicable to bacterial genes tagged with Tn5. The region cloned from P. fluorescens contained three complete open reading frames. The deduced gene products, designated PqqFAB, showed extensive similarities to proteins involved in the biosynthesis of pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ) in Klebsiella pneumoniae, Acinetobacter calcoaceticus, and Methylobacterium extorquens. PQQ-negative mutants of strain CHA0 were constructed by gene replacement. They lacked glucose dehydrogenase activity, could not utilize ethanol as a carbon source, and showed a strongly enhanced production of Plt on malt agar. These effects were all reversed by complementation with pqq+ recombinant plasmids. The growth of a pqqF mutant on ethanol and normal Plt production were restored by the addition of 16 nM PQQ. However, the Phl- phenotype of strain CHA625 was due not to the pqq defect but presumably to a secondary mutation. In conclusion, a lack of PQQ markedly stimulates the production of Plt in P. fluorescens.
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Sacoglossan sea slugs (Mollusca: Opisthobranchia) are one of the few groups of specialist herbivores in the marine environment. Sacoglossans feed suctorially on the cell sap of macroalgae, from which they 'steal' chloroplasts (kleptoplasty) and deterrent substances (kleptochemistry), retaining intracellularly both host plastids and chemicals. The ingested chloroplasts continue to photosynthesize for periods ranging from a few hours or days up to 3 months in some species. Shelled, more primitive sacoglossans feed only on the siphonalean green algal genus Caulerpa, and they do not have functional kleptoplasty. The diet of sacoglossans has radiated out from this ancestral food. Among the shell-less Plakobranchidae (=Elysiidae), the more primitive species feed on other siphonales (families Derbesiaceae, Caulerpaceae, Bryopsidaceae and Codiaceae) and fix carbon, while the more 'advanced' species within the Plakobranchidae and Limapontioidae have a more broad dietary range. Most of these 'advanced' species are unable to fix carbon because the chloroplasts of their food algae are mechanically disrupted during ingestion. Mesoherbivores are likely to be eaten if they live on palatable seaweeds, their cryptic coloration and form not always keeping them safe from predators. Sacoglossans prefer to live on and eat chemically defended seaweeds, and they use ingested algal chemicals as deterrents of potential predators. The most ancestral shelled sacoglossans (Oxynoidae) and some Plakobranchidae such as Elysia translucens, Thuridilla hopei and Bosellia mimetica have developed a diet-derived chemical defense mechanism. Oxynoids and Thuridilla hopei are able to biomodify the algal metabolites. However, the Plakobranchidae Elysia timida and E. viridis, together with Limapontioidea species, are characterized by their ability to de novo synthesize polypropionate metabolites. A whole analysis of kleptoplasty and chemical defenses in sacoglossans may offer a better understanding of the ecology and evolution of these specialized opisthobranchs. In this paper we summarize some of the latest findings, related mainly to Mediterranean species, and offer a plausible evolutionary scenario based on the biological and chemical trends we can distinguish in them.
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OBJECTIVE: Nandrolone is an anabolic steroid widely used in several sports. The numerous nandrolone positive cases in the recent years (International Olympic Committee statistics) led to several studies in the antidoping field. Nevertheless, essential questions pertaining to nandrolone endogenous production, the effects of physical exercise on the excretion of nandrolone metabolites, and contamination from nutritional supplements must still be addressed. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the influence of exhaustive exercises on 19-norandrosterone (19-NA) and 19-noretiocholanolone (19-NE) urinary excretion rates after administration of labeled nandrolone. SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: A total of 34 healthy male Caucasian volunteers from the Institute of Sports Sciences and Physical Education (University of Lausanne) applied to participate in the study. All subjects were free from any physical drug addiction and were instructed strictly to avoid any nutritional supplement or steroid before and during the study. The participants were randomly dispatched in 2 groups in a double-blind way: a placebo group and a group treated with C-labeled nandrolone. MAIN OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS: The urinary concentrations of the 2 main nandrolone metabolites, 19-NA and 19-NE, were measured using gas chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry. In addition, clinical parameters such as creatinine, total protein, and beta2-microglobuline levels were determined using immunologic assays. RESULTS: After an oral ingestion of a 25 mg 3,4-C2-nandrolone dose, followed by a second identical dose 24 hours later, 19-NA and 19-NE could be detected in the urine for a period of 6 days after the initial intake. Despite several interesting observations, the measurements were very scattered and did not appear to be significantly influenced by exercise sessions in the athlete population. CONCLUSIONS: The results of this study suggest that physical exercise cannot be considered as a reliable parameter that systematically affects nandrolone metabolite concentrations in the urine.
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Exposure to various pesticides has been characterized in workers and the general population, but interpretation and assessment of biomonitoring data from a health risk perspective remains an issue. For workers, a Biological Exposure Index (BEI®) has been proposed for some substances, but most BEIs are based on urinary biomarker concentrations at Threshold Limit Value - Time Weighted Average (TLV-TWA) airborne exposure while occupational exposure can potentially occurs through multiple routes, particularly by skin contact (i.e.captan, chlorpyrifos, malathion). Similarly, several biomonitoring studies have been conducted to assess environmental exposure to pesticides in different populations, but dose estimates or health risks related to these environmental exposures (mainly through the diet), were rarely characterized. Recently, biological reference values (BRVs) in the form of urinary pesticide metabolites have been proposed for both occupationally exposed workers and children. These BRVs were established using toxicokinetic models developed for each substance, and correspond to safe levels of absorption in humans, regardless of the exposure scenario. The purpose of this chapter is to present a review of a toxicokinetic modeling approach used to determine biological reference values. These are then used to facilitate health risk assessments and decision-making on occupational and environmental pesticide exposures. Such models have the ability to link absorbed dose of the parent compound to exposure biomarkers and critical biological effects. To obtain the safest BRVs for the studied population, simulations of exposure scenarios were performed using a conservative reference dose such as a no-observed-effect level (NOEL). The various examples discussed in this chapter show the importance of knowledge on urine collections (i.e. spot samples and complete 8-h, 12-h or 24-h collections), sampling strategies, metabolism, relative proportions of the different metabolites in urine, absorption fraction, route of exposure and background contribution of prior exposures. They also show that relying on urinary measurements of specific metabolites appears more accurate when applying this approach to the case of occupational exposures. Conversely, relying on semi-specific metabolites (metabolites common to a category of pesticides) appears more accurate for the health risk assessment of environmental exposures given that the precise pesticides to which subjects are exposed are often unknown. In conclusion, the modeling approach to define BRVs for the relevant pesticides may be useful for public health authorities for managing issues related to health risks resulting from environmental and occupational exposures to pesticides.
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OBJECT: To determine whether glycine can be measured at 7 T in human brain with (1)H magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS). MATERIALS AND METHODS: The glycine singlet is overlapped by the larger signal of myo-inositol. Density matrix simulations were performed to determine the TE at which the myo-inositol signal was reduced the most, following a single spin-echo excitation. (1)H MRS was performed on an actively shielded 7 T scanner, in five healthy volunteers. RESULTS: At the TE of 30 ms, the myo-inositol signal intensity was substantially reduced. Quantification using LCModel yielded a glycine-to-creatine ratio of 0.14 +/- 0.01, with a Cramer-Rao lower bound (CRLB) of 7 +/- 1%. Furthermore, quantification of metabolites other than glycine was possible as well, with a CRLB mostly below 10%. CONCLUSION: It is possible to detect glycine at 7 T in human brain, at the short TE of 30 ms with a single spin-echo excitation scheme.
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RESUME Depuis les années 1980, les stéroïdes androgéniques anabolisants (SAA) sont restés les produits dopants les plus utilisés par les sportifs. Les propriétés principales attribuées à ces substances sont une augmentation de la masse et de la force musculaire ainsi qu'une agressivité supérieure pouvant s'avérer bénéfique lors des entraînements ou des compétitions. En plus de cette "tradition" liée à la consommation des SAA, une autre problématique est apparue dans le monde antidopage suite à la fulgurante expansion de l'utilisation des compléments alimentaires par les athlètes professionnels et amateurs. Dès la fin des années 1990, une recrudescence de cas positifs de dopage aux SAA a été attribuée à la contamination des compléments alimentaires par des composés anabolisants tels que la testostérone ou la nandrolone ou par des prohormones se situant en amont dans le métabolisme de certains SAA et conduisant à la présence, dans les urines, de traces de substances interdites par l'Agence Mondiale Antidopage (AMA). Afin de mettre en garde les autorités antidopage ainsi que les athlètes quant aux problèmes liés aux compléments alimentaires, le Laboratoire Suisse d'Analyse du Dopage (LAD) a décidé d'étudier de manière plus précise la composition d'une centaine de produits accessibles en Suisse par l'intermédiaire d'internet. Cette étude a permis de mettre en évidence un taux de non conformité des produits avoisinant les 20%, avec une contamination plus importante des produits contenant des hormones ou des prohormones. La consommation de doses journalières recommandées des produits contaminés a mené à la détection dans les urines de la présence de substances interdites par l'AMA. Ces résultats confirment ainsi que l'usage de compléments alimentaires peut s'avérer dangereuse dans le cadre de contrôles antidopage et que les effets sur l'état physique et mental des athlètes peuvent dépasser les effets désirés et être dramatiques pour la poursuite d'une carrière sportive. D'autre part, cela démontre que l'alimentation peut mener à la présence urinaire de substances proscrites telles que les métabolites de la nandrolone, la 19-norandrostéreone (19-NA) et la 19-norétiocholanolone (19-NE). Afin de démontrer un effet potentiel de l'exercice physique sur l'excrétion urinaire des métabolites de la nandrolone, une première étude clinique a été réalisée avec 34 volontaires. Deux doses orales de nandrolone marquée avec deux atomes de C13 ont été administrées aux sujets. Les urines ont été récoltées durant les 5 jours suivant les prises orales (études d'excrétion) ainsi qu'avant et après les 8 séances d'entraînements du protocole. Les analyses des études d'excrétion ont permis d'établir une variabilité intra- et inter-individuelle du métabolisme et de la pharmacocinétique de la 19-NA et de la 19-NE. En dépit de la rapide élimination urinaire des métabolites de la nandrolone C13, les analyses des échantillons prélevés avant et après les différents efforts n'ont pas révélé une influence nette de l'exercice physique sur les concentrations urinaires de la 19-NA et 19-NE. Une seconde étude clinique a été effectuée, avec la participation de 30 volontaires. Il s'agissait de déterminer si la consommation de multiples doses orales d'un décanoate de testostérone, de 19-norandrostenedione (un précurseur de la nandrolone) ou de placebo durant un mois, pouvait avoir des effets bénéfiques sur la récupération et la performance physique. En parallèle, les sujets étaient soumis à un entrainement d'endurance intense et individualisé. Divers paramètres physiologiques ont été étudiés dans le sérum et les urines afin de mettre en évidence une meilleure récupération de l'organisme. Aucun de ses paramètres n'a permis de conclure que la consommation orale de SAA est favorable pour optimaliser les capacités de récupération des athlètes. De plus, les performances physiques ont été évaluées avant et après l'entraînement et le traitement. Aucune différence significative n'a été démontrée entre les trois groupes de volontaires. L'état psychologique des volontaires a été évalué à l'aide de questionnaires (short Profile of Mood State, sPOMS) remplis à trois reprises au cours du protocole. De manière générale, l'évolution observée est une augmentation de la fatigue avec une diminution de la vigueur. Des analyses statistiques ont révélé que des prises orales de testostérone, et dans une moindre mesure de 19-norandrostenedione, ont une légère influence sur cette évolution générale en diminuant les effets de l'entrainement sur le profil psychologique. Les urines récoltées durant le protocole ont été analysées par GC/C/IRMS et GCMS afin de détecter les variations des concentrations des hormones liées au métabolisme de la testostérone. Les résultats ont démontré une variabilité interindividuelle du métabolisme de la testostérone qui implique que les critères de positivité imposés par l'AMA ne sont pas forcément valables pour tous les individus. La détection de la 19-NA et de la 19-NE, issus du métabolisme in vivo de la 19norandrostenedione, a confirmé les résultats obtenus sur la pharmacocinétique et le métabolisme de la nandrolone C13 obtenus lors de la première étude clinique. Ce travail a permis de clarifier certains points en lien avec l'abus de la nandrolone dans le sport et notamment par rapport à la consommation de compléments alimentaires. Les deux études cliniques n'ont pas véritablement apporté les réponses souhaitées aux hypothèses de départ. Cependant certains aspects intéressants en relation avec le métabolisme des SAA ont été découverts et pourront peut-être permettre à la lutte antidopage d'évoluer vers une meilleure efficacité. SUMMARY Since 1980's, anabolic androgenic steroids (AAS) are still the most used doping agents in sports. The main properties attributed to these substances are an increase of muscle mass and strength and also a higher aggressiveness that could be beneficial during trainings and competitions. In addition to this "tradition" linked to the AAS intake, another problematics has raised in the antidoping field. Indeed, nutritional supplements have been more and more used by professional and amateur athletes. Since the end of the 1990's, an outburst of positive doping cases with AAS has been attributed to nutritional supplements contaminations with anabolic compounds like testosterone or nandrolone or with prohormones located above in the metabolism of some AAS and prompting urinary traces of forbidden compounds by the World Antidoping Agency (WADA). In order to inform the antidoping authorities and the athletes about the problems linked to the nutritional supplements, the Swiss Laboratory for Doping Analyses (LAD) decided to investigate more precisely the composition of about hundred products accessible in Switzerland through different web sites. This study showed that about 20% of the products were not conformed to the composition announced by the manufacturers. The oral intake of daily recommended doses of the contaminated products revealed the presence in urines of forbidden substances by the WADA. Hence, these results confirm that the use of nutritional supplements can lead to adverse analytical findings in antidoping controls and that the effects on athletes' physical and mental state could be different from the ones desired and could be dramatic for the continuation of an athlete's career. Moreover, this demonstrates that the diet can lead to the presence in urines of proscribed substances like nandrolone metabolites, i.e. 19-norandrosterone (19-NA) and 19-noretiocholanolone (19-NE). To put forward a potential effect of physical exercise on urinary nandrolone metabolites excretion rate, a first clinical study was done with 34 volunteers. Two oral doses of nandrolone labelled with two C13 atoms were administered to the subjects. The urines were collected during the 5 days following the treatment (excretion studies) and before and after the 8 exercise sessions of the protocol. The analyses of excretion studies revealed an intra- and inter-individual variability of the metabolism and the pharmacokinetics of 19-NA and 19-NE. In spite of the rapid urinary elimination of the nandrolone C13 metabolites, the analyses of the urine samples gathered before and after efforts did not show a clear influence of physical exercise on the urinary 19-NA and 19-NE concentrations. A second clinical study was done with the participation of 30 volunteers. The main aim was to determine if multiple oral doses of testosterone undecanoate, 19-norandrostenedione (a nandrolone precursor) or placebo during one month, could have beneficial effects on recovery and physical performance. Meanwhile, the individuals had to follow an intense and personalized endurance training program. Several physiological parameters were investigated in serum and urines in order to demonstrate a better organism's recovery. None of these parameters lead to the conclusion that oral intake of AAS is useful to optimise the recovery capacities of athletes. In addition, physical performances were evaluated before and after the training and treatment month. No significant difference was shown between the three volunteers groups. The psychological state of the volunteers was assessed through questionnaires (short Profile of Mood State, sP4MS) filled three times during the protocol. The global evolution is an increase of fatigue with an decrease of vigour. Statistical analyses revealed that the oral intake of testosterone, and to a lesser extent of 19= norandrostenedione, have a small influence on this general evolution in decreasing the effect of training on the psychological profile. The urines collected during the protocol were analysed by GC/C/IRMS and GCMS to detect concentrations variations of hormones related to the testosterone metabolism. The results revealed an interindividual variability of testosterone metabolism which implies that the guidance concerning endogenous steroids prescribed by the WADA are not uniformly valid for all individuals. Detection of 19-NA and 19-NE, coming from the in vivo metabolism of 19norandrostenedione, confirmed the results previously obtained on the pharamcokinetics and metabolism of the nandrolone C13 in the first clinical study. This work allowed to clarify some aspects linked to nandrolone abuse in sports and noteworthy related to nutritional supplements intake. The two clinical studies did not really bring plain answers to the basal hypotheses but some interesting aspects in relation with AAS metabolism were put forth and would perhaps allow an evolution of a more effective fight against doping.
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Background:Intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) is a major risk factor for both perinatal and long-term morbidity. Bovine lactoferrin (bLf) is a major milk glycoprotein considered as a pleiotropic functional nutrient. The impact of maternal supplementation with bLf on IUGR-induced sequelae, including inadequate growth and altered cerebral development, remains unknown.Methods:IUGR was induced through maternal dexamethasone infusion (100 μg/kg during last gestational week) in rats. Maternal supplementation with bLf (0.85% in food pellet) was provided during both gestation and lactation. Pup growth was monitored, and Pup brain metabolism and gene expression were studied using in vivo (1)H NMR spectroscopy, quantitative PCR, and microarray in the hippocampus at postnatal day (PND)7.Results:Maternal bLf supplementation did not change gestational weight but increased the birth body weight of control pups (4%) with no effect on the IUGR pups. Maternal bLf supplementation allowed IUGR pups to recover a normalized weight at PND21 (weaning) improving catch-up growth. Significantly altered levels of brain metabolites (γ-aminobutyric acid, glutamate, N-acetylaspartate, and N-acetylaspartylglutamate) and transcripts (brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), divalent metal transporter 1 (DMT-1), and glutamate receptors) in IUGR pups were normalized with maternal bLf supplementation.Conclusion:Our data suggest that maternal bLf supplementation is a beneficial nutritional intervention able to revert some of the IUGR-induced sequelae, including brain hippocampal changes.