Faculty Opinions recommendation of Negative impact of statins on oligodendrocytes and myelin formation in vitro and in vivo.

Author(s):  
Rhona Mirsky
2008 ◽  
Vol 28 (50) ◽  
pp. 13609-13614 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Klopfleisch ◽  
D. Merkler ◽  
M. Schmitz ◽  
S. Kloppner ◽  
M. Schedensack ◽  
...  

Toxins ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 69 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kartik Sunagar ◽  
Suyog Khochare ◽  
R. R. Senji Laxme ◽  
Saurabh Attarde ◽  
Paulomi Dam ◽  
...  

The Common Krait (Bungarus caeruleus) shares a distribution range with many other ‘phenotypically-similar’ kraits across the Indian subcontinent. Despite several reports of fatal envenomings by other Bungarus species, commercial Indian antivenoms are only manufactured against B. caeruleus. It is, therefore, imperative to understand the distribution of genetically distinct lineages of kraits, the compositional differences in their venoms, and the consequent impact of venom variation on the (pre)clinical effectiveness of antivenom therapy. To address this knowledge gap, we conducted phylogenetic and comparative venomics investigations of kraits in Southern and Western India. Phylogenetic reconstructions using mitochondrial markers revealed a new species of krait, Romulus’ krait (Bungarus romulusi sp. nov.), in Southern India. Additionally, we found that kraits with 17 mid-body dorsal scale rows in Western India do not represent a subspecies of the Sind Krait (B. sindanus walli) as previously believed, but are genetically very similar to B. sindanus in Pakistan. Furthermore, venom proteomics and comparative transcriptomics revealed completely contrasting venom profiles. While the venom gland transcriptomes of all three species were highly similar, venom proteomes and toxicity profiles differed significantly, suggesting the prominent role of post-genomic regulatory mechanisms in shaping the venoms of these cryptic kraits. In vitro venom recognition and in vivo neutralisation experiments revealed a strong negative impact of venom variability on the preclinical performance of commercial antivenoms. While the venom of B. caeruleus was neutralised as per the manufacturer’s claim, performance against the venoms of B. sindanus and B. romulusi was poor, highlighting the need for regionally-effective antivenoms in India.


2010 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 21
Author(s):  
Hugo F. Rivera ◽  
Erika P. Martínez ◽  
Jairo A. Osorio ◽  
Edgar Martínez

<p>Phytophthora infestans (Mont.) de Bary, agente causal de la gota de la papa, es considerado la principal limitante de la producción de este cultivo en Colombia. El control habitual del patógeno se realiza con fungicidas de tipo sistémico, que incrementan los costos de producción, pueden inducir la resistencia del patógeno y tiene un impacto negativo en el ambiente. Por tanto, se llevó a cabo este estudio con el propósito de buscar alternativas amigables con el ambiente, que hagan parte de un paquete tecnológico eficaz de control. Dos cepas nativas de Psedomonas fluorescens (039T y 021V), provenientes de cultivos de papa, fueron evaluadas contra P. infestans. Las suspensiones bacterianas y los biosurfactantes parcialmente purificados (BPP), producidos por éstas (obtenidos en medio mínimo de sales con querosén), fueron aplicados sobre foliolos desprendidos en ensayos in vitro y experimentos in vivo en plantas de papa, en condiciones controladas en casa de malla. Los resultados demostraron la capacidad que tienen los biosurfactantes y las suspensiones bacterianas para controlar al patógeno, ya que el BPP 039T logró reducir el nivel de severidad de la enfermedad en 79,9% in vitro y 38,5% in vivo, mientras que el BPP 021V redujo en 78,7% in vitro y 30,2% in vivo. Las suspensiones bacterianas redujeron el nivel de severidad en 72,4% (039T) y 66,1% (021V) en las evaluaciones in vitro y 35% en los experimentos in vivo. Los resultados de esta investigación muestran el potencial que tienen los biosurfactantes para el control de la gota en Colombia.</p><p> </p><p><strong>Evaluation of Biosurfactants Produced by Pseudomonas fluorescens for Potato Late Blight Control (Phytophthora infestans (Mont) de Bary) Under Controlled Conditions</strong></p><p>Phytophthora infestans (Mont.) de Bary, causal agent of potato late blight is considered the main limiting pathogen for the production of this crop in Colombia. The usual control of the disease has been performed with systemic fungicides which increase production costs, can induce pathogen resistance and have a negative impact on the environment. Therefore, this study was carried out in order to find effective and environmentally friendly control alternatives for potato late blight. Two Pseudomonas fluorescens native strains (039T and 021V) isolated from potato crops were evaluated against P. infestans. Bacterial suspensions (obtained from minimal salts medium added with kerosene) and partially purified biosurfactants (BPP) were applied on detached leaflets for in vitro assays and on potato plants in greenhouse, for in vivo assays and the measure of inhibitory effect of the disease was assessed. The results showed the ability of P. fluorescens biosurfactants and bacterial suspensions to control the pathogen. BPP 039T was able to reduce the level of severity disease by 79.9% in vitro and 38.5% in vivo, whereas BPP 021V decreased 78.7% in vitro and 30.2% in vivo. Bacterial suspensions reduced the severity level in 72.4% (039T) and 66.1% (021V) in vitro assessments and 35% in the in vivo experiment. These results show the potential of P. fluorescens biosurfactants to control the potato late blight in Colombia.</p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 ◽  
pp. 1-18 ◽  
Author(s):  
Monika A. Olszewska ◽  
Joanna Kolodziejczyk-Czepas ◽  
Magdalena Rutkowska ◽  
Anna Magiera ◽  
Piotr Michel ◽  
...  

Polyphenol-rich plant extracts might alleviate the negative impact of oxidative stress and inflammation, but careful phytochemical standardisation and evaluation of various mechanisms are required to fully understand their effects. In this context, flower extracts of Sorbus aucuparia L.—a traditional medicinal plant—were investigated in the present work. The LC-MS/MS profiling of the extracts, obtained by fractionated extraction, led to the identification of 66 constituents, mostly flavonols (quercetin and sexangularetin glycosides with dominating isoquercitrin), pseudodepsides of quinic and shikimic acids (prevailing isomers of chlorogenic acid and cynarin), and flavanols (catechins and proanthocyanidins). Minor extract components of possible chemotaxonomic value were flavalignans (cinchonain I isomers) and phenylamides (spermidine derivatives). As assessed by HPLC-PDA and UV-spectrophotometric studies, the extracts were polyphenol-abundant, with the contents up to 597.6 mg/g dry weight (dw), 333.9 mg/g dw, 382.0 mg/g dw, and 169.0 mg/g dw of total phenolics, flavonoids, proanthocyanidins, and caffeoylquinic acids, respectively. Their biological in vitro effects were phenolic-dependent and the strongest for diethyl ether, ethyl acetate, and n-butanol fractions of the methanol-water (7 : 3, v/v) extract. The extracts showed significant, concentration-dependent ability to scavenge in vivo-relevant radical/oxidant agents (O2∙−, OH∙, H2O2, ONOO–, NO∙, and HClO) with the strongest effects towards OH∙, ONOO–, HClO, and O2∙− (compared to ascorbic acid). Moreover, the extracts efficiently inhibited lipoxygenase and hyaluronidase (compared to indomethacin) but were inactive towards xanthine oxidase. At in vivo-relevant levels (1-5 μg/mL), they also effectively protected human plasma components (proteins and lipids) against ONOO–-induced oxidative damage (reduced the levels of 3-nitrotyrosine, lipid hydroperoxides, and thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances) and normalised/enhanced the total nonenzymatic antioxidant capacity of plasma. In cytotoxicity tests, the extracts did not affect the viability of human PBMCs and might be regarded as safe. The results support the application of the extracts in the treatment of oxidative stress-related pathologies cross-linked with inflammatory changes.


2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frank Elbers ◽  
Claudia Woite ◽  
Valentina Antoni ◽  
Sara Stein ◽  
Hiroshi Funakoshi ◽  
...  

Tryptophan is an essential amino acid for hosts and pathogens. The liver enzyme tryptophan 2,3-dioxygenase (TDO) provokes, by its ability to degrade tryptophan to N-formylkynurenine, the precursor of the immune-relevant kynurenines, direct and indirect antimicrobial and immunoregulatory states. Up to now these TDO-mediated broad-spectrum effector functions have never been observed under hypoxiain vitro, although physiologic oxygen concentrations in liver tissue are low, especially in case of infection. Here we analysed recombinant expressed human TDO andex vivomurine TDO functions under different oxygen conditions and show that TDO-induced restrictions of clinically relevant pathogens (bacteria, parasites) and of T cell proliferation are abrogated under hypoxic conditions. We pinpointed the loss of TDO efficiency to the reduction of TDO activity, since cell survival and TDO protein levels were unaffected. In conclusion, the potent antimicrobial as well as immunoregulatory effects of TDO were substantially impaired under hypoxic conditions that pathophysiologically occurin vivo. This might be detrimental for the appropriate host immune response towards relevant pathogens.


Sarcoma ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carol H. Lin ◽  
Yi Guo ◽  
Samia Ghaffar ◽  
Peter McQueen ◽  
Jonathan Pourmorady ◽  
...  

Osteosarcoma (OS) is the most common primary bone malignancy with a high propensity for local invasion and distant metastasis. Despite current multidisciplinary treatments, there has not been a drastic change in overall prognosis within the past 2 decades. Dickkopf-3 protein (Dkk-3/REIC) has been known to inhibit canonical Wnt/β-catenin pathway, and its expression has been shown to be downregulated in OS cell lines. Usingin vivoandin vitrostudies, we demonstrated that Dkk-3-transfected 143B cells inhibited tumorigenesis and metastasis in an orthotopic xenograft model of OS. Inoculation of Dkk-3-transfected 143B cell lines into nude mice showed significant decreased tumor growth and less metastatic pulmonary nodules (88.7%) compared to the control vector.In vitroexperiments examining cellular motility and viability demonstrated less anchorage-independent growth and decreased cellular motility for Dkk-3-transfected 143B and SaOS2 cell lines compared to the control vector. Downstream expressions of Met, MAPK, ALK, and S1004A were also downregulated in Dkk-3-transfected SaOS2 cells, suggesting the ability of Dkk-3 to inhibit tumorigenic potential of OS. Together, these data suggest that Dkk-3 has a negative impact on the progression of osteosarcoma. Reexpressing Dkk-3 in Dkk-3-deficient OS tumors may prove to be of benefit as a preventive or therapeutic strategy.


Reproduction ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 145 (3) ◽  
pp. 255-263 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lukas Ded ◽  
Natasa Sebkova ◽  
Martina Cerna ◽  
Fatima Elzeinova ◽  
Pavla Dostalova ◽  
...  

Estrogens play a crucial role in spermatogenesis and estrogen receptor α knock-out male mice are infertile. It has been demonstrated that estrogens significantly increase the speed of capacitation in vitro; however this may lead to the reduction of reproductive potential due to the decreased ability of these sperm to undergo the acrosome reaction. To date the in vivo effect of estrogens on the ability of sperm to capacitate has not been investigated. Therefore, in this study, we exposed mice (n=24) to 17β-estradiol (E2) at the concentration of 20 ng/ml either during puberty from the fourth to seventh week of age (n=8), or continuously from birth for a period of 12 weeks (n=8) at which age the animals from both groups were killed. The capacitation status of epididymal and testicular sperm was analysed by tyrosine phosphorylation (TyrP) antibody (immunofluorescence and western blot) and chlortetracycline (CTC) assay. According to our results, in vivo exposure to increased E2 concentrations caused premature sperm capacitation in the epididymis. The effect of E2, however, seems reversible because after the termination of the exposure premature epididymal sperm capacitation is decreased in animals treated during puberty. Furthermore the changes in epididymal sperm capacitation status detected by TyrP and CTC positively correlate with plasma levels of E2 and the expression of the estrogen-dependent trefoil factor 1 (Tff1) gene in testicular tissue. Therefore, our data implicate that in vivo exposure to E2 under specific conditions leads to the premature capacitation of mouse sperm in epididymis with a potential negative impact on the sperm reproductive fitness in the female reproductive tract.


2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. i20-i20
Author(s):  
Daniel de la Nava ◽  
Iker Ausejo-Mauleon ◽  
Virginia Laspidea ◽  
Lucía Marrodán ◽  
Marta Zalacain ◽  
...  

Abstract Pediatric High Grade Gliomas (pHGGs), including Diffuse Midline Gliomas (DMGs), are aggressive pediatric tumors with a poor overall survival. In the last years, ONC201 has emerged as a promising agent in the field of pediatric brain tumors. Another interesting approach is virotherapy; Delta-24-RGD, which is an oncolytic virus, has demonstrated safety and effectiveness in different preclinical models and in clinical trials. Therefore, in this work we set to evaluate whether the combination of ONC201 with Delta-24-RGD could result in an increased therapeutic benefit in pHGGs and DMGs. Given that ONC201 targets mitochondrial metabolism in a preclinical setting, we assessed potential negative interactions of the combination therapy. While ONC201 treatment resulted in decreased viral protein load (E1A and fiber), there was no significant negative impact on the viral replication (measured by hexon staining). ONC201 did not disrupt the activation of mTORC1 pathway by the adenovirus. Furthermore, Delta-24-RGD did not affect the decrease in basal oxygen consumption rate induced by ONC201. Our results suggested that ONC201 and Delta-24-RGD are not antagonistic. Evaluation of the in vitro cytotoxicity in different human pHGG (CHLA-03-AA and SF188) and DMG (TP-54 and SU-DIPG-IV) cell lines showed that the combination treatment was significantly better that either agent alone. In vivo, a single local injection of Delta-24-RGD followed by a weekly ONC201 of mice bearing CHLA-03-AA cell line orthotopically significantly increased the median overall survival (PBS: 48 days; ONC201: 54.5 days; Delta-24-RGD: 62 days; ONC201+Delta-24-RGD: 95 days (P=0.0008)) of these mice leading to 20% long-term survivors, free of disease. Currently, we are evaluating the effect of the combination in immunosuppressed and immunocompetent models of DMGs. In summary, our data indicate ONC201 in combination with Delta-24-RGD could be a potential therapeutic choice for patients affected by pHGGs and DMGs.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 3909-3909
Author(s):  
Sarah Grasedieck ◽  
Christoph Rueß ◽  
Nicole Pochert ◽  
Susanne Lux ◽  
Adrian Schwarzer ◽  
...  

Abstract Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) have complex, mainly chromatin-associated functions and their expression is highly coordinated and cell-type specific. Based on their tight regulation in normal differentiation, we set out to investigate whether lncRNAs are dysregulated in diseases where differentiation is impaired, such as in acute myeloid leukemia (AML). To identify lncRNAs that are essential for both normal hematopoiesis as well as AML maintenance, we sequenced the long polyA- and non-polyA-tagged transcriptome from successive stages of human myelopoiesis (myeloblasts, promyelocytes, metamyelocytes, and neutrophils) isolated from bone marrow of healthy donors (n=3). Applying a high-dimensional data portraying approach (OposSOM, Löffler-Wirth et al., BMC Bioinformatics, 2015), we identified functional expression modules of lncRNAs that are either positively or negatively associated with myeloid lineage commitment in our dataset. Seven out of the top15 differentiation-associated lncRNAs exhibit significant prognostic relevance in overall and event-free survival analyses of independent AML patient datasets and improve the predictive power of the current prognosis standards (cytogenetic risk/age/TP53-status). In particular, a combination of 3 transcripts, PROMYS (Promoter of Myelopoiesis, annotated as uncharacterized ncRNA LOC107985167), ANTAMY (Antagonist of Myelopoiesis, uncharacterized ncRNA LOC101927745) and LINC00677, outperformed the recently reported prognostic benefit of the LSC17high score (Ng et al, Nature, 2016) by a factor of Ø 22.7 based on concordance index score increase (Ø 4.8% vs. 0.21%). All three lncRNAs are highly conserved, expressed in 10 tested human AML cell lines as well as significantly differentially expressed in distinct cytogenetic patient subgroups of The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) LAML cohort (n=171). PROMYS is downregulated in t(15;17) and t(8;21) cases, supporting its strong association with worse OS in the TCGA-LAML dataset (p=0.0001). In contrast, ANTAMY shows high expression in AML with t(8;21), and LINC00677 in NPM1+/FLT3- mutated AML patient samples with normal karyotype (CN-AML) and in core Binding factor (CBF) AMLs. Accordingly, high expression levels of both lncRNAs associate with a significantly better OS in the TCGA LAML dataset (p=0.01 and 0.02, respectively). To investigate their function in vitro, we knocked out each lncRNA individually in the human OCI/AML-5 AML cell line using CRISPR/Cas9. Loss of ANTAMY impaired proliferation (p=0.04) and increased both monocytic differentiation upon treatment with 2-0-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) (p=0.0001) and granulocytic differentiation with all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) (p=0.0002) compared to the empty vector control. Loss of LINC00677 in OCI/AML-5 cells specifically increased granulocytic differentiation through ATRA (p=0.0002). In contrast, inactivation of PROMYS led to reduced differentiation induced by ATRA (p=0.00004) and TPA (p=0.002). Furthermore, we found that PROMYS is involved in the regulation of the Macrophage colony-stimulating factor 1 (CSF1), which is deregulated in ATRA- and TPA-induced differentiation in PROMYS knockout but not in control cells (p<0.002 and <0.00002, respectively), explaining its negative impact on differentiation. Through screening of human myelopoiesis, we identified three unexplored lncRNAs: LINC00677, PROMYS, and ANTAMY, which play a role in myeloid differentiation and have an impact on patient prognosis. Our in vitro findings confirm that ANTAMY, LINC00677, and PROMYS are active modulators of leukemic cells, which influence their proliferation, morphology, myeloid marker expression as well as apoptosis rate. These transcripts and their interaction partners add an additional layer of regulation to the understanding of differentiation and might represent previously unknown vulnerabilities of AML cells, which warrants their further investigation in vivo. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2016 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 156 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. A. M. M. Ferraz ◽  
H. H. W. Henning ◽  
K. M. A. Van Dorenmalen ◽  
P. L. A. M. Vos ◽  
T. A. E. Stout ◽  
...  

Oviduct epithelial cells (OECs) generate the microenvironment for mammalian fertilization. When cultured in vitro OECs rapidly lose their differentiated cell properties (e.g. secretory activity and cilia), while suspended cells have a limited lifespan. These limitations, likely due to the lack of folded tubular geometry of the oviduct, prompted us to combine transwell cell culture and 3-D printing technologies to mimic the in vivo OEC niche in order to better study the unique role of the oviduct and its microenvironment during the processes of fertilization and early embryonic development. U-shape inserts were 3-D printed using a multi-arm acrylate-based resin (PIC100) on an Envisiontec Perfactory P3 stereolithographer. Post-printing treatments of custom-made tubular transwell inserts were first tested in order to determine any possible negative impact of the plastics on cell growth. Inserts were either untreated, post-cured with 1000 flashes/side (Otoflash, 66 W), post-cured and Soxhlet-extracted overnight in isopropanol, or post-cured and Soxhlet-extracted over the weekend in water at 37°C. The post-cured and Soxhlet-extracted overnight in isopropanol inserts were selected as best pretreatment for culturing OECs. These inserts were mounted with track-etched PET membranes (12 µm thick, 0.4 µm pore diameter) to create a U-shape geometry that allows perfusion. Bovine OECs were obtained by squeezing the whole oviduct collected from slaughterhouse cows (on luteal phase) and cultured as monolayers for 7 days (n = 2 cows). These de-differentiated OECs were seeded on the membranes, grown to confluence (7 days), and cultured (1) at an air-liquid interface for 6 and 14 days (air-liquid culture) or (2) under perfusion (6 mL h–1) for 6 days (perfusion culture). OECs were also cultured on coverslips as monolayers (2-D culture) for 6 and 14 days. After this period, the OECs were fixed and immune labelled to determine their polarized state. Polarization of OECs (laminin and primary cilia detection) was observed on Day 6 for perfusion culture, on Day 14 for air-liquid culture, and was not detected in 2-D culture. The presence of secondary cilia (acetylated α-tubulin) was observed in 6% of the cells cultured under perfusion at Day 6; secondary cilia was not present in air-liquid or 2-D cultures during the period analysed. In conclusion, post-curing and Soxhlet extraction of leachable compounds is crucial to avoid toxic effects on cell growth. The U-shape custom-designed inserts are able to create a tube-like surface in which bovine oviducal cells can be cultured to confluency and thereafter repolarize (presence of primary cilia and detection of laminin); this polarization occurs faster when the U-shape culture is under perfusion. Further studies will examine the ability of the cells to differentiate further (development of secondary cilia and secretory ability) and support in vitro fertilization. To this end, 3-D designs will be tested to determine their use for live cell imaging and for collecting secreted fluids.


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