937 resultados para tris(pyrazolyl)borate ligands
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Leprosy is a spectral disease exhibiting two polar sides, namely, lepromatous leprosy (LL) characterised by impaired T-cell responses and tuberculoid leprosy in which T-cell responses are strong. Proper T-cell activation requires signalling through costimulatory molecules expressed by antigen presenting cells and their ligands on T-cells. We studied the influence of costimulatory molecules on the immune responses of subjects along the leprosy spectrum. The expression of the costimulatory molecules was evaluated in in vitro-stimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells of lepromatous and tuberculoid patients and healthy exposed individuals (contacts). We show that LL patients have defective monocyte CD86 expression, which likely contributes to the impairment of the antigen presentation process and to patients anergy. Accordingly, CD86 but not CD80 blockade inhibited the lymphoproliferative response to Mycobacterium leprae. Consistent with the LL anergy, there was reduced expression of the positive signalling costimulatory molecules CD28 and CD86 on the T-cells in these patients. In contrast, tuberculoid leprosy patients displayed increased expression of the negative signalling molecules CD152 and programmed death-1 (PD-1), which represents a probable means of modulating an exacerbated immune response and avoiding immunopathology. Notably, the contacts exhibited proper CD86 and CD28 expression but not exacerbated CD152 or PD-1 expression, suggesting that they tend to develop a balanced immunity without requiring immunosuppressive costimulatory signalling.
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Myeloid cells express the TNF family ligands BAFF/BLyS and APRIL, which exert their effects on B cells at different stages of differentiation via the receptors BAFFR, TACI (Transmembrane Activator and CAML-Interactor) and/or BCMA (B Cell Maturation Antigen). BAFF and APRIL are proteins expressed at the cell membrane, with both extracellular and intracellular domains. Therefore, receptor/ligand engagement may also result in signals in ligand-expressing cells via so-called "reverse signalling". In order to understand how TACI-Fc (atacicept) technically may mediate immune stimulation instead of suppression, we investigated its potential to activate reverse signalling through BAFF and APRIL. BAFFR-Fc and TACI-Fc, but not Fn14-Fc, reproducibly stimulated the ERK and other signalling pathways in bone marrow-derived mouse macrophages. However, these effects were independent of BAFF or APRIL since the same activation profile was observed with BAFF- or APRIL-deficient cells. Instead, cell activation correlated with the presence of high molecular mass forms of BAFFR-Fc and TACI-Fc and was strongly impaired in macrophages deficient for Fc receptor gamma chain. Moreover, a TACI-Fc defective for Fc receptor binding elicited no detectable signal. Although these results do not formally rule out the existence of BAFF or APRIL reverse signalling (via pathways not tested in this study), they provide no evidence in support of reverse signalling and point to the importance of using appropriate specificity controls when working with Fc receptor-expressing myeloid cells.
Resumo:
Summary The Wnt signaling pathway plays an important role during development and also for maintaining tissue homeostasis due to its function in proliferation, differentiation and cell fate decisions. Wnt ligands bind to Frizzled receptors and activate a signaling cascade that results in the stabilization of β-Catenin, a key component of the pathway. β-Catenin translocates to the nucleus, where, together with a transcription factor of the Tcf/Lef family, it activates the expression of target genes. Legless and Pygopus are two recently discovered essential components of the Wnt pathway in Drosophila, which may mediate the nuclear import and retention of beta-Catenin and/or contribute directly to the activation of Wnt target genes. To address the function of Legless in the mouse, we have generated compound constitutive and conditional knockout alleles of the two homologues legless 'I (bc1-9) and 2. We have induced the deletion of legless in self-renewing tissues such as the gastrointestinal tract, the mammary gland and the skin during adulthood and constitutively in the embryo. The present thesis focused on the consequences of the inactivation of legless in epithelial homeostasis as well as in a regeneration model and its comparison to pygopus. Deletion of neither legless nor pygopus in the adult small intestine resulted in any apparent anomaly, contrasting expectations from the phenotype caused by over-expression of Dickkopf, a Wnt inhibitor (Pinto et al., 2003). These observations indicate that canonical Wnt signaling might not be indispensable for normal gastrointestinal epithelium homeostasis, or that, in this context, Legless and Pygopus are not essential components of the Wnt pathway. However, the regeneration of the colonic epithelium after DSS induced damage was markedly impaired in legless, but not in pygopus deficient mice. Thus, unlike in Drosophila, deletion of mammalian legless and pygopus resulted in different phenotypes, suggesting that Legless might interact with as yet unidentified partners in addition to Pygopus. Resumé La voie de signalisation Wnt joue un rôle important au cours du développement ainsi que pour le maintien de l' homéostase tissulaire due à sa fonction durant la prolifération, la différentiation et les décisions sur l'avenir des cellules. Les ligands de Wnt se lient aux récepteurs Frizzled et activent une cascade de signalisation résultant en la stabilisation de β-Catenin, un composant central de cette voie. β-Catenin est transloquée dans le noyau ou, avec l'aide des facteurs de transcription de la famille Tcf/lef, elle active la transcription des gènes cibles. Legless et Pygopus sont deux composants récemment découverts et essentiels de la voie de signalisation Wnt chez la Drosophile qui pourraient être des médiateurs de l'import et de la rétention nucléaire de bêta-catenin et/ou contribuer directement a l'activation des gènes cibles. Afin de comprendre la fonction de Legless chez la souris, nous avons généré simultanément les allèles « knock-out » constitutifs et conditionnels des deux homologues legless 1 (bc1-9) et 2. Nous avons induit la délétion de legless dans des tissus capables de s'auto renouveler comme le tract gastro-intestinal, la glande mammaire et la peau chez l'adulte et nous avons supprimé constitutivement legless chez l'embryon. La présente thèse est concentrée sur les conséquences de l'inactivation de legless au cours de l' homéostase épithéliale ainsi que dans un modèle de régénération et sur sa comparaison avec pygopus. Ni la délétion de legless ni celle de pygopus dans l'intestin adulte n'ont résulté en quelque anomalie, contrastant nos attentes provenant des phénotypes causes par la surexpression de Dickkpof, un inhibiteur de Wnt (Pinto et al., 2003). Ces observations indiquent que la voie de signalisation Wnt/β-Catenin pourrait ne pas être indispensable à l' homéostase normale du tract gastro-intestinal, ou que, dans ce contexte, Legless et Pygopus ne sont pas des composants essentiels de la vole Wnt. Cependant, la régénération de l'épithélium du colon après induction de son endommagement au DSS fut dramatiquement diminuée chez legless mais pas chez les souris mutantes pour pygopus. Ainsi, a la différence de chez la Drosophile, la délétion de legless et pygopus chez les mammifères a résulté en des phénotypes différents, suggérant que Legless pourrait interagir avec d'autres partenaires, encore non identifies, que Pygopus.
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BACKGROUND & AIMS: The peroxisome proliferator-activated nuclear receptors (PPAR-alpha, PPAR-beta, and PPAR-gamma), which modulate the expression of genes involved in energy homeostasis, cell cycle, and immune function, may play a role in hepatic stellate cell activation. Previous studies focused on the decreased expression of PPAR-gamma in hepatic stellate cell activation but did not investigate the expression and role of the PPAR-alpha and -beta isotypes. The aim of this study was to evaluate the expression of the different PPARs during hepatic stellate cell activation in vitro and in situ and to analyze possible factors that might contribute to their expression. In a second part of the study, the effect of a PPAR-beta agonist on acute liver injury was evaluated. METHODS: The effects of PPAR isotype-specific ligands on hepatic stellate cell transition were evaluated by bromodeoxyuridine incorporation, gel shifts, immunoprecipitation, and use of antisense PPAR-beta RNA-expressing adenoviruses. Tumor necrosis factor alpha-induced PPAR-beta phosphorylation and expression was evaluated by metabolic labeling and by using specific P38 inhibitors. RESULTS: Hepatic stellate cells constitutively express high levels of PPAR-beta, which become further induced during culture activation and in vivo fibrogenesis. No significant expression of PPAR-alpha or -gamma was found. Stimulation of the P38 mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway modulated the expression of PPAR-beta. Transcriptional activation of PPAR-beta by L165041 enhanced hepatic stellate cell proliferation. Treatment of rats with a single bolus of CCl(4) in combination with L165041 further enhanced the expression of fibrotic markers. CONCLUSIONS: PPAR-beta is an important signal-transducing factor contributing to hepatic stellate cell proliferation during acute and chronic liver inflammation.
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We have explored in vitro the mechanism by which human immunodeficiency virus, type 1 (HIV-1) induces cell death of primary CD4+ T cells in conditions of productive infection. Although HIV-1 infection primed phytohemagglutinin-activated CD4+ T cells for death induced by anti-CD95 antibody, T cell death was not prevented by a CD95-Fc decoy receptor, nor by decoy receptors of other members of the TNFR family (TNFR1/R2, TRAILR1/R2/OPG, TRAMP) or by various blocking antibodies, suggesting that triggering of death receptors by their cognate ligands is not involved in HIV-induced CD4 T cell death. HIV-1 induced CD4 T cell shrinkage, cell surface exposure of phosphatidylserine, loss of mitochondrial membrane potential (Deltapsim), and mitochondrial release of cytochrome c and apoptosis-inducing factor. A typical apoptotic phenotype (nuclear chromatin condensation and fragmentation) only occurred in around half of the dying cells. Treatment with benzyloxycarbonyl-Val-Ala-Asp-fluoromethylketone, a broad spectrum caspase inhibitor, prevented nuclear chromatin condensation and fragmentation in HIV-infected CD4+ T cells and in a cell-free system (in which nuclei were incubated with cytoplasmic extracts from the HIV-infected CD4+ T cells). Nevertheless, benzyloxycarbonyl-Val-Ala-Asp-fluoromethylketone did not prevent mitochondrial membrane potential loss and cell death, suggesting that caspases are dispensable for HIV-mediated cell death. Our findings suggest a major role of the mitochondria in the process of CD4 T cell death induced by HIV, in which targeting of Bax to the mitochondria may be involved.
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To further understand the pharmacological properties of N-oleoylethanolamine (OEA), a naturally occurring lipid that activates peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPARα), we designed sulfamoyl analogs based on its structure. Among the compounds tested, N-octadecyl-N'-propylsulfamide (CC7) was selected for functional comparison with OEA. The performed studies include the following computational and biological approaches: 1) molecular docking analyses; 2) molecular biology studies with PPARα; 3) pharmacological studies on feeding behavior and visceral analgesia. For the docking studies, we compared OEA and CC7 data with crystallization data obtained with the reference PPARα agonist GW409544. OEA and CC7 interacted with the ligand-binding domain of PPARα in a similar manner to GW409544. Both compounds produced similar transcriptional activation by in vitro assays, including the GST pull-down assay and reporter gene analysis. In addition, CC7 and OEA induced the mRNA expression of CPT1a in HpeG2 cells through PPARα and the induction was avoided with PPARα-specific siRNA. In vivo studies in rats showed that OEA and CC7 had anorectic and antiobesity activity and induced both lipopenia and decreases in hepatic fat content. However, different effects were observed when measuring visceral pain; OEA produced visceral analgesia whereas CC7 showed no effects. These results suggest that OEA activity on the PPARα receptor (e.g., lipid metabolism and feeding behavior) may be dissociated from other actions at alternative targets (e.g., pain) because other non cannabimimetic ligands that interact with PPARα, such as CC7, do not reproduce the full spectrum of the pharmacological activity of OEA. These results provide new opportunities for the development of specific PPARα-activating drugs focused on sulfamide derivatives with a long alkyl chain for the treatment of metabolic dysfunction.
Resumo:
Retinoid X Receptors (RXR) were initially identified as nuclear receptors binding with stereo-selectivity the vitamin A derivative 9-cis retinoic acid, although the relevance of this molecule as endogenous activator of RXRs is still elusive. Importantly, within the nuclear receptor superfamily, RXRs occupy a peculiar place, as they are obligatory partners for a number of other nuclear receptors, thus integrating the corresponding signaling pathways. In this chapter, we describe the structural features allowing RXR to form homo- and heterodimers, and the functional consequences of this unique ability. Furthermore, we discuss the importance of studying RXR activity at a genome-wide level in order to comprehensively address the biological implications of their action that is fundamental to understand to what extent RXRs could be exploited as new therapeutic targets.