scholarly journals A White Grape Juice Extract Reduces Fat Accumulation through the Modulation of Ghrelin and Leptin Expression in an In Vivo Model of Overfed Zebrafish

Molecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 1119
Author(s):  
Giuseppe Montalbano ◽  
Alessandro Maugeri ◽  
Maria Cristina Guerrera ◽  
Natalizia Miceli ◽  
Michele Navarra ◽  
...  

A caloric surplus and a sedentary lifestyle are undoubtedly known to be the leading causes of obesity. Natural products represent valuable allies to face this problematic issue. This study was planned to assess the effect of a white grape (Vitis vinifera) juice extract (WGJe) in diet-induced obese zebrafish (Danio rerio). Fish were divided into four different diet groups: (i) normally fed (NF); (ii) overfed (OF); (iii) WGJe-supplemented NF (5 mL/L in fish water); (iv) WGJe-supplemented OF. Body mass index (BMI) was extrapolated each week. After the fourth week, euthanized zebrafish were processed for both microscopic evaluations and gene expression analyses. OF zebrafish showed higher BMI values with respect to NF counterparts, an effect that was hindered by WGJe treatment. Moreover, histological analyses showed that the area of the adipose tissue, as well as the number, size, and density of adipocytes was significantly higher in OF fish. On the other hand, WGJe was able to avoid these outcomes both at the subcutaneous and visceral levels, albeit to different extents. At the gene level, WGJe restored the altered levels of ghrelin and leptin of OF fish both in gut and brain. Overall, our results support the anti-obesity property of WGJe, suggesting its potential role in weight management.

2010 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. S74-S75
Author(s):  
Mary Beth M. Grabowsky ◽  
Nicholas A. Pallotta ◽  
Matthew W. Connelly ◽  
Brett Van Etten ◽  
Rebecca A. MacDonald ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Kieu Kien Trung ◽  
Nguyen Thi Huyen Trang ◽  
Vu Thi Hien ◽  
Nguyen Lai Thanh

Smoking is widely known to has a major contributor to public health issues both in worldwide and Vietnam. At the same time, Vietnam have a large number of smokers and the market is filled with diverse brand of tobacco products. In this study, we sampled 6 types of cigarette: ThangLong, Vina, Craven, Demi, Maxx and Bastos from local stores and conducted toxicological test on zebrafish larvae. Our results show that there are varied in toxicological properties of total particle matter collected from different cigarette brands in lethal and morphology effects on zebrafish embryos. LC50 of 6 brands after 96 hours of exposure were: ThangLong = 48.7 mg/L, Vina = 45.96 mg/L, Craven = 80.52 mg/L, Demi = 30.91 mg/L, Maxx = 83.54 mg/L and Bastos = 74.92 mg/L. They are lower than 100 mg/L, which put them under Category 2 and 3 in the GHS classification criteria for acute toxicity.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 2533-2533
Author(s):  
Elizabeth Bulaeva ◽  
Davide Pellacani ◽  
Naoto Nakamichi ◽  
Philip Beer ◽  
Colin Hammond ◽  
...  

Background: Current evidence suggests that genetic and epigenetic abnormalities drive the development of human Acute Myeloid Leukemias (AMLs). However, whether these are sufficient to establish a permanent, self-sustaining AML population, and the potential role of shared perturbed downstream pathways is unknown. We hypothesized that a modest upregulated expression of MYC might play such a role given its commonly increased expression in many AML patients' cells. To test this hypothesis, we assessed the dynamics and types of cells produced in sublethally irradiated NOD-Rag1-/--IL2Rγc-/-(NRG) mice transgenically producing human IL3, GM-CSF and SCF (NRG-3GS mice) following their transplantation with freshly isolated subsets of normal CD34+ cord blood (CB) cells that were first lentivirally transduced with a human MYC cDNA. Results: FACS and Western blot analyses indicated this produced a 2 to 5-fold increase in MYC mRNA and protein levels in MYC-transduced CD34+ CB cells, and 21/22 NRG-3GS mice injected with ≥6,500 of these cells developed a fatal human AML population within 7 weeks. Histological analysis of their bone marrow and spleen cells showed both contained a prominent human CD123+CD33+CD15±CD34-CD14-CD19-CD3- blast population. Additional limiting dilution transplants showed that both the CD34+CD38- cells (enriched for hematopoietic stem cells) and the more differentiated CD34+ GMPs were similarly highly susceptible (at frequencies of 1/14 and 1/46, respectively) and, in both cases, generated progeny that could initiate serially transplantable leukemias with the same phenotypic and transcriptomic features. Comparison to normal CB cells indicated these most closely resembled GMPs, and comparison to pediatric AML patient samples indicated a similarity to myelomonocytic leukemias with enhanced MYC expression. Interestingly, 14 sublethally irradiated NRG mice (the parental strain not producing human 3GS) transplanted with matched aliquots of CD34+ MYC-transduced cells regenerated a normal spectrum of CD19+ lymphoid cells, CD14+ and CD15+ GM cells and readily detectable CD34+ cells for up to 32 weeks of follow-up with no evidence of leukemogenesis. However, transfer of these regenerated human cells into secondary NRG-3GS mice, even after this extended period, enabled their rapid production of a lethal human AML in all 5 mice tested. In contrast, matched aliquots transplanted into 5 NRG recipients produced declining grafts of normal cells. This finding was then exploited to determine which growth factors were responsible for activating the AML program by transplanting NRG mice with CD34+ CB cells transduced with MYC and just a single growth factor, or all 3 as a positive control. In this set of experiments, a lethal human AML was obtained when MYC was paired with human IL3 or GM-CSF (or all 3 together), but not with SCF (or no growth factors). Conclusion: We report here a new in vivo model of MYC-induced human myeloid leukemogenesis that produces a serially transplantable AML closely resembling human pediatric myelomonocytic leukemias with elevated MYC expression. The rapidity, consistency, and high frequency of this transformation process obtained by transducing late granulopoietic as well as early types of normal human CD34+ progenitor cells makes this system highly attractive for future mechanistic and therapeutic testing experiments. The discovery that MYC deregulation alone generates a stable "latent program" that can be rapidly activated by exposure to exogenous growth factors typical of inflammatory states also raises intriguing questions about the potential role of such events in the genesis of AML populations that arise in patients. Disclosures Beer: Karus therapeutics Ltd.: Employment.


Genes ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 1053
Author(s):  
Paola Gulías ◽  
Jorge Guerra-Varela ◽  
Manuela Gonzalez-Aparicio ◽  
Ana Ricobaraza ◽  
Africa Vales ◽  
...  

Viral vector use is wide-spread in the field of gene therapy, with new clinical trials starting every year for different human pathologies and a growing number of agents being approved by regulatory agencies. However, preclinical testing is long and expensive, especially during the early stages of development. Nowadays, the model organism par excellence is the mouse (Mus musculus), and there are few investigations in which alternative models are used. Here, we assess the possibility of using zebrafish (Danio rerio) as an in vivo model for adenoviral vectors. We describe how E1/E3-deleted adenoviral vectors achieve efficient transduction when they are administered to zebrafish embryos via intracranial injection. In addition, helper-dependent (high-capacity) adenoviral vectors allow sustained transgene expression in this organism. Taking into account the wide repertoire of genetically modified zebrafish lines, the ethical aspects, and the affordability of this model, we conclude that zebrafish could be an efficient alternative for the early-stage preclinical evaluation of adenoviral vectors.


Author(s):  
U Lichtenauer ◽  
PL Schmid ◽  
A Oßwald ◽  
I Renner-Müller ◽  
M Reincke ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

1997 ◽  
Vol 78 (04) ◽  
pp. 1242-1248 ◽  
Author(s):  
David E Newby ◽  
Robert A Wright ◽  
Christopher A Ludlam ◽  
Keith A A Fox ◽  
Nicholas A Boon ◽  
...  

SummaryThe effects on blood flow and plasma fibrinolytic and coagulation parameters of intraarterial substance P, an endothelium dependent vasodilator, and sodium nitroprusside, a control endothelium independent vasodilator, were studied in the human forearm circulation. At subsystemic locally active doses, both substance P (2-8 pmol/min) and sodium nitroprusside (2-8 μg/min) caused dose-dependent vasodilatation (p <0.001 for both) without affecting plasma concentrations of PAI-1, von Willebrand factor antigen or factor VIII:C activity. Substance P caused local increases in t-PA antigen and activity (p <0.001) in the infused arm while sodium nitroprusside did not. At higher doses, substance P increased blood flow and t-PA concentrations in the noninfused arm. We conclude that brief, locally active and subsystemic infusions of intraarterial substance P cause a rapid and substantial local release of t-PA which appear to act via a flow and nitric oxide independent mechanism. This model should provide a useful and selective method of assessing the in vivo capacity of the forearm endothelium to release t-PA acutely.


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