Regulation of mRNA expression encoding chaperone and co-chaperone proteins of the glucocorticoid receptor in peripheral blood: association with depressive symptoms during pregnancy

2011 ◽  
Vol 42 (5) ◽  
pp. 943-956 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. R. Katz ◽  
Z. N. Stowe ◽  
D. J. Newport ◽  
M. E. Kelley ◽  
T. W. Pace ◽  
...  

BackgroundMajor depressive disorder during pregnancy associates with potentially detrimental consequences for mother and child. The current study examined peripheral blood gene expression as a potential biomarker for prenatal depressive symptoms.MethodMaternal RNA from whole blood, plasma and the Beck Depression Inventory were collected longitudinally from preconception through the third trimester of pregnancy in 106 women with a lifetime history of mood or anxiety disorders. The expression of 16 genes in whole blood involved in glucorticoid receptor (GR) signaling was assessed using real-time polymerase chain reaction. In parallel, plasma concentrations of progesterone, estradiol and cortisol were measured. Finally, we assessedex vivoGR sensitivity in peripheral blood cells from a subset of 29 women.ResultsmRNA expression of a number of GR-complex regulating genes was up-regulated over pregnancy. Women with depressive symptoms showed significantly smaller increases in mRNA expression of four of these genes –FKBP5, BAG1, NCOA1andPPID.Ex vivostimulation assays showed that GR sensitivity diminished with progression of pregnancy and increasing maternal depressive symptoms. Plasma concentrations of gonadal steroids and cortisol did not differ over pregnancy between women with and without clinically relevant depressive symptoms.ConclusionsThe presence of prenatal depressive symptoms appears to be associated with altered regulation of GR sensitivity. Peripheral expression of GR co-chaperone genes may serve as a biomarker for risk of developing depressive symptoms during pregnancy. The presence of such biomarkers, if confirmed, could be utilized in treatment planning for women with a psychiatric history.

2020 ◽  
pp. 1-8
Author(s):  
Stephen R. Hennigar ◽  
Alyssa M. Kelley ◽  
Bradley J. Anderson ◽  
Nicholes J. Armstrong ◽  
Holly L. McClung ◽  
...  

Abstract Zn is an essential nutrient for humans; however, a sensitive biomarker to assess Zn status has not been identified. The objective of this study was to determine the reliability and sensitivity of Zn transporter and metallothionein (MT) genes in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) to Zn exposure ex vivo and to habitual Zn intake in human subjects. In study 1, human PBMCs were cultured for 24 h with 0–50 µm ZnSO4 with or without 5 µm N,N,N′,N′-tetrakis(2-pyridylmethyl)ethylenediamine (TPEN), and mRNA expression of SLC30A1-10, SLC39A1-14, MT1 subtypes (A, B, E, F, G, H, L, M and X), MT2A, MT3 and MT4 mRNA was determined. In study 2, fifty-four healthy male and female volunteers (31·9 (sd 13·8) years, BMI 25·7 (sd 2·9) kg/m2) completed a FFQ, blood was collected, PBMCs were isolated and mRNA expression of selected Zn transporters and MT isoforms was determined. Study 1: MT1E, MT1F, MT1G, MT1H, MT1L, MT1M, MT1X, MT2A and SLC30A1 increased with increasing concentrations of Zn and declined with the addition of TPEN. Study 2: Average daily Zn intake was 16·0 (sd 5·3) mg/d (range: 9–31 mg/d), and plasma Zn concentrations were 15·5 (SD 2·8) μmol/l (range 11–23 μmol/l). PBMC MT2A was positively correlated with dietary Zn intake (r 0·306, P = 0·03) and total Zn intake (r 0·382, P < 0·01), whereas plasma Zn was not (P > 0·05 for both). Findings suggest that MT2A mRNA in PBMCs reflects dietary Zn intake in healthy adults and may be a component in determining Zn status.


2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 46
Author(s):  
Mengjia Zhu ◽  
Liqun Wang

Background: Gene chip has a wide range of applications in screening disease markers.Methods: GSE63063 dataset including 238 healthy controls and 285 patients with Alzheimer’s disease (AD) was downloaded to investigate the whole blood mRNA expression pattern. Lumi and LIMMA packages of R software were used to screening differential-expressed genes (DEGs). We functionally annotate DEGs through DAVID database. Then STRING database and Cytoscape software were used to construct protein-protein interaction models for hub genes.Results: Our results indicated that 51 DEGs altered in AD patients compared with healthy controls. These DEGs was associated with transcription (BP), RNA binding (MF) and ribosome (CC) terms and the ribosome signaling pathway. In addition, Ribosomal protein S17 (RPS17) was identified as the top 1 in hub genes using maximal clique centrality. RPS17 mutations reduced erythrocyte production and impaired brain development. Finally, the expression levels of the three genes (NDUFA1, RPL36AL, and NDUFS5) showed a good predictive effect.Conclusion: In conclusion, we explored the expression of genes in the AD blood and NDUFA1 may be a potential biomarker for predicting AD.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 3831-3831
Author(s):  
Mathias Lutz ◽  
Andrea Worschech ◽  
Miriam Alb ◽  
Sabine Gahn ◽  
Laura Bernhard ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Immune responses against Y-chromosomal encoded epitopes are well known as a driving force for both strong graft-versus-host (GvH) and graft-versus-leukemia (GvL) effects in female-into-male allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantations (HSCT). Female donors with a history of pregnancies with male infants are likely to carry T lymphocyte based immune responses against minor histocompatibility antigens derived from the Y chromosome (H-Y antigens). A feto-maternal cell transfer and consecutive immunization of the mother forms the likely basis of this phenomenon. Interestingly, male individuals may carry T lymphocyte based immune responses against H-Y as well. So far, little is known about their frequency, their origin and their functionality particularly in light of allogeneic immunotherapy. Therefore, we screened a group of volunteer blood donors including men and women for H-Y responses. This group has been previously reported for immune responses against tumor-associated antigens (Lutz M et al, ASH 2012). Material and Methods:After obtaining local ethical approval and written informed consent 114 HLA-A*02:01-positive healthy volunteer blood donors were enrolled in this scientific study including 38 nulligravidous women with a median age of 28 (21–53) years, 38 primi- or multiparous women with a median age of 46 (28–63) years and 38 men with a median age of 41 (21–56) years, respectively. Peripheral blood was drawn and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) were isolated using density gradient centrifugation. CD8+ T lymphocytes were isolated and stimulated with irradiated T2 cells (ATCC CRL-1992) which were pulsed with two different concentrations (0.1 and 10 µM) of the HLA-A*02:01-restricted minor antigen H-Y (FIDSYICQV) to distinguish between low- and high-avidity immune responses. After extraction of total RNA, Interferon gamma (IFNγ) mRNA expression was analyzed by quantitative reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR). IFNγ mRNA expression was normalized to CD8 mRNA levels and expressed as relative fold change compared to the irrelevant melanoma antigen Glycoprotein 100 (gp100). A two-fold change or more as compared to gp100 was considered as a positive result. Results:Significant immune responses were detected in a small fraction of both women and men using two different peptide concentrations. Interestingly, women with a history of pregnancy did not show higher immune responses than those with no (known) history of pregnancy for both peptide concentrations. However, men showed the highest frequency of positive immune responses for both peptide concentrations. For the higher peptide concentration men showed significantly higher immune responses than nulligravidous (P < 0.05) or primi-/multiparous women (P < 0.01) or all women (P < 0.01). All results of this analysis are depicted in Figure 1. The horizontal line represents the cut-off for positive immune responses (relative fold change of 2.0). Conclusions: The results in women suggest that their immune responses – if not boosted by a further pregnancy or immunotransfer to an allogeneic individual – are short-lived. The detection of H-Y responses in nulligravidous women could be a result of unknown pregnancies in the past. We expected the highest frequency of significant immune responses against H-Y in primi- or multiparous women. However, to our surprise men showed the highest frequency and had significantly higher levels than women. This finding is in line with prior data where we found men to carry frequent immune responses against tumor-associated antigens such as WT1. At the end H-Y may serve as an auto-antigen to men suggesting that continuous gonadal expression of Y-chromosomal encoded antigens maintains these low-avidity autoimmune responses as previously described for cancer/testis antigens (Lutz M et al, ASH 2012). The transfer of these immune responses in a male-to-male HSCT may therefore contribute preferably to the GvL effect and thus be beneficial. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2010 ◽  
Vol 55 (2) ◽  
pp. 567-574 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert S. Wallis ◽  
Wesley Jakubiec ◽  
Vikas Kumar ◽  
Gabriella Bedarida ◽  
Annette Silvia ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTTuberculosis is a serious global health threat for which new treatments are urgently needed. This study examined the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of multiple ascending doses of the oxazolidinone PNU-100480 in healthy volunteers, using biomarkers for safety and efficacy. Subjects were randomly assigned to PNU-100480 or placebo (4:1) at schedules of 100, 300, or 600 mg twice daily or 1,200 mg daily for 14 days or a schedule of 600 mg twice daily for 28 days to which pyrazinamide was added on days 27 and 28. A sixth cohort was given linezolid at 300 mg daily for 4 days. Signs, symptoms, and routine safety tests were monitored. Bactericidal activity againstMycobacterium tuberculosiswas measured inex vivowhole-blood culture. Plasma drug and metabolite concentrations were compared to the levels required for inhibition ofM. tuberculosisgrowth and 50% inhibition of mitochondrial protein synthesis. All doses were safe and well tolerated. There were no hematologic or other safety signals during 28 days of dosing at 600 mg twice daily. Plasma concentrations of PNU-100480 and metabolites at this dose remained below those required for 50% inhibition of mitochondrial protein synthesis. Cumulative whole-blood bactericidal activity of PNU-100480 at this dose (−0.316 ± 0.04 log) was superior to the activities of all other doses tested (P< 0.001) and was significantly augmented by pyrazinamide (−0.420 ± 0.06 log) (P= 0.002). In conclusion, PNU-100480 was safe and well tolerated at all tested doses. Further studies in patients with tuberculosis are warranted. Biomarkers can accelerate early development of new tuberculosis treatments.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fabio Morandi ◽  
Michela Croce ◽  
Giuliana Cangemi ◽  
Sebastiano Barco ◽  
Valentina Rigo ◽  
...  

The expression of the immunosuppressive moleculesIL-10and arginase 1 (ARG-1), and ofFOXP3andCD163, as markers of regulatory T cells (Treg) and macrophages, respectively, was evaluated in bone marrow (BM) and peripheral blood (PB) samples collected at diagnosis from patients with metastatic neuroblastoma (NB). IL-10 and ARG-1 plasma concentrations were measured and the association of each parameter with patients’ outcome was tested. The percentages of immunosuppressive Treg and type-1 regulatory (Tr1) cells were also determined. In both BM and PB samples,IL-10mRNA expression was higher in metastatic NB patients than in controls. IL-10 plasma concentration was higher in patients with NB regardless of stage. NeitherIL-10expression nor IL-10 plasma concentration significantly associated with patient survival. In PB samples from metastatic NB patients,ARG-1andCD163expression was higher than in controls but their expression did not associate with survival. Moreover, ARG-1 plasma concentration was lower than in controls, and no association with patient outcome was found. Finally, in metastatic NB patients, the percentage of circulating Treg was higher than in controls, whereas that of Tr1 cells was lower. In conclusion, although IL-10 concentration and Treg percentage were increased, their contribution to the natural history of metastatic NB appears uncertain.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 3508-3508
Author(s):  
Alexander E Perl ◽  
Grace R Jeschke ◽  
Takashi Sato ◽  
Shiro Akinaga ◽  
Niranjan S. Rao ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 3508 Although first-generation FLT3 inhibitors may have had limited anti-leukemic effects due to suboptimal target inhibition, newer drugs such as AC220 and KW-2449 have substantially greater in vitro potency and bioavailability. Ex vivo assays such as the plasma inhibition assay (PIA) are useful to estimate free drug bioavailability, but direct confirmation of biochemical FLT3 inhibition in leukemic blasts in vivo has proven more challenging to employ systematically for drug development. Here we report the development of a fixed whole blood intracellular flow cytometry platform to measure real-time signal inhibition during a clinical trial of the second-generation FLT3 inhibitor KW-2449. Methods: Anticoagulated blood samples were aliquoted into FACS tubes within four hours of collection; a subset was exposed to signaling inhibitors (KW-2449, rapamycin × 30 min.) or activators (phorbol ester/PMA or FLT3 ligand/FL × 10 min.) to establish dynamic controls. Following incubation, samples were formaldehyde-fixed, red cells were lysed with the permeabilizing agent triton X-100, and specimens were stored at −20C in glycerol medium. Subjects' samples from all time points were simultaneously thawed, denatured with ice-cold methanol, and stained with a single cocktail of antibodies. Blasts were identified by CD45 and side scatter (SSC) and confirmed by multiple surface markers (CD33, CD34, CD117, HLA-DR, etc.). Positive gates for phospho-proteins were created by comparing blasts in stimulated and unstimulated conditions and/or autofluorescence (FMO) controls. Results: Despite adequate controls, flow demonstrated limited changes in FLT3-ITD+ blasts' pSTAT5 signal following either FL stimulation or ex vivo KW-2449 treatment of these peripheral blood primary samples. This contrasted with the FLT3-ITD+ cell line Molm14, in which FLT3 inhibition reduced pSTAT5. However, the PI3K/AKT/mTOR downstream target ribosomal protein S6 (S6) was consistently observed to be constitutively phosphorylated in both Molm14 cells and peripheral blood FLT3-ITD+ AML blasts. pS6 in all FLT3-ITD+ samples markedly augmented with ex vivo FL, and decreased following ex vivo KW-2449 treatment. We therefore serially monitored S6 phosphorylation during therapy on a phase 1/2 trial of KW-2449. In this clinical trial, subjects were treated with KW-2449 every 6–8 hours, due to the drug's relatively short half life. 10 subjects (9 FLT3-ITD+, 1 FLT3-WT) provided serial blood samples for analysis. All FLT3-ITD+ subjects had blasts identifiable by morphology and immunophenotype. Samples with as few as 500 blasts/uL were informative for pS6. In all cases, blasts showed dynamic changes in pS6 in response to ex vivo FL. As previously described using intracellular flow cytometry, pS6 in primary AML samples was heterogeneous, and, at basal state, frequently only demonstrable in a subset of blasts. We observed constitutive S6 phosphorylation in 8/9 subjects' leukemic cells. The mean percentage of blasts with constitutive pS6 was 21% (median 7%, range 5–70%). To directly quantify FLT3 kinase inhibition in vivo, we serially monitored pS6 in blasts by flow prior to and following their initial oral KW-2449 dose. In 8/8 patients with baseline constitutive S6 phosphorylation, blood obtained two hours following the initial dose showed marked reduction in the percentage of pS6+ blasts to a mean of 3.8% (median 1.3% range 0.1 to 20%). This reflected an 83% mean reduction in the percentage of pS6+ blasts. PIA was performed in 8/9 of FLT3-ITD+ subjects and confirmed that potent FLT3-inhibitory concentrations were present 2 hours after a single dose of KW-2449 (mean reduction from baseline of 79% for pFLT3 and 88% for pSTAT5). Two subjects' samples were followed serially by flow cytometry throughout the dosing interval. One showed sustained inhibition (consistent with concurrent PIA), while in the other, pS6 returned to baseline within 4–6 hours of the initial dose (concurrent PIA not done). Summary: We confirm that PI3K/AKT/mTOR is a major downstream pathway of FLT3 signaling in primary AML samples. We further demonstrate the feasibility of intracellular flow cytometry for S6 phosphorylation to monitor the biochemical efficacy of FLT3 inhibitors in patients. Studies are underway to correlate biochemical FLT3 inhibition by flow cytometry with clinical response/resistance to KW-2449 and other FLT3 inhibitors. Disclosures: Sato: Kyowa Hakko Kirin Co., LTD: Employment. Akinaga:Kyowa Hakko Kirin Co., LTD: Employment. Rao:Kyowa Hakko Kirin Co., LTD: Employment. Levis:Kyowa Hakko Kirin Co., LTD: Research Funding; Ambit Biosciences: Consultancy. Carroll:Kyowa Hakko Kirin Co., LTD: Research Funding.


1993 ◽  
Vol 70 (06) ◽  
pp. 0937-0941 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maureen Andrew ◽  
Brian MacIntyre ◽  
James MacMillan ◽  
William G Williams ◽  
Colleen Gruenwald ◽  
...  

SummaryHeparin therapy for children undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) is monitored in the operating room by automated whole blood activated clotting times (ACT). For many years our institution used Hemochron (HC) ACT machines but changed to HemoTec (HT) ACT machines because they required a smaller blood sample and provided results in duplicate. When HemoTec ACT machines were introduced at our institution, the surgical team was concerned that increased amounts of heparin were being administered to our patients during CPB. This study was conducted to investigate the potential mechanisms responsible for these clinical observations. First, we compared ACT values on ex vivo blood samples from 20 consecutive pediatric patients (6 samples each) during CPB. The HC ACT values were significantly and systematically increased over HT ACT values (HC: 750 ± 40 vs HT: 418 ± 26, Mean ± SEM, p <0.01). 94% of all HC ACT values were above 450 s compared to only 27% of HT ACT values. If HT ACT values had been used for patient monitoring, all patients would have received more heparin to achieve ACT values above 450 s. The two machines reported similar ACT values when heparin was added in vitro to whole blood (0.1-5.0 units/ml), (HC: Y = 98X + 104, r2 = 0.93 HT: Y = 82X + 109, r2 = 0.94). Heparin concentrations in our patients following a bolus of 300 U/kg of heparin, but prior to CPB were 3.2 ± 0.07 units/ml. Following the initiation of CPB, heparin concentrations decreased to 1.3 ± 0.05, reflecting, in part, hemodilution by the pump prime (1 U of heparin/ml). In contrast to the in vitro results, there was no relationship between ACT values measured by either machine and plasma heparin concentrations in ex vivo samples. Finally, plasma concentrations of 8 coagulation proteins measured prior to CPB and following CPB were decreased by 27-55%, predominantly reflecting the final dilution by CPB. In conclusion: 1) HT and HC machines cannot be used interchangeably in pediatric patients without risk of altering clinical practice in an uncontrolled fashion; and 2) ACT values from children on CPB correlate poorly with heparin concentrations, likely due to hemodilution. Optimal use of anticoagulant therapy during CPB in children requires further study in clinical trials and ongoing quality control.


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