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31.
The translation of the unspliced and partially spliced viral mRNAs that encode the late, structural proteins of HIV-1 depends on the viral-protein Rev. Oligomeric binding of Rev to the Rev response element (RRE) in these mRNAs promotes their export from the nucleus and thus controls their expression. Here, we compared the effects of hydrophobic to hydrophilic mutations within the oligomerization domain of Rev using assays for oligomeric RNA binding, protein structure, and export from the nucleus. Oligomeric RNA binding alone does not correlate well with RNA transport activity in the subset of mutants. However, protein structure as judged by CD spectroscopy does correlate well with Rev function. The oligomeric assembly of Rev-L18T is impaired but exhibits minor defects in structure and retains a basal level of activity in vivo. The prevalence of L18T in infected individuals suggests a positive selection mechanism for L18T modulation of Rev activity that may delay the onset of AIDS.  相似文献   
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The recent emergence of multimodality imaging, particularly the combination of PET and MRI, has led to excitement over the prospect of improving detection of disease. Iron oxide nanoparticles have become a popular platform for the fabrication of PET/MRI probes owing to their advantages of high MRI detection sensitivity, biocompatibility, and biodegradability. In this article, we report the synthesis of dextran-coated iron oxide nanoparticles (DIO) labeled with the positron emitter 64Cu to generate a PET/MRI probe, and modified with maleic anhydride to increase the negative surface charge. The modified nanoparticulate PET/MRI probe (MDIO-64Cu-DOTA) bears repetitive anionic charges on the surface that facilitate recognition by scavenger receptor type A (SR-A), a ligand receptor found on activated macrophages but not on normal vessel walls. MDIO-64Cu-DOTA has an average iron oxide core size of 7–8 nm, an average hydrodynamic diameter of 62.7 nm, an r 1 relaxivity of 16.8 mM?1 s?1, and an r 2 relaxivity of 83.9 mM?1 s?1 (37 °C, 1.4 T). Cell studies confirmed that the probe was nontoxic and was specifically taken up by macrophages via SR-A. In comparison with the nonmodified analog, the accumulation of MDIO in macrophages was substantially improved. These characteristics demonstrate the promise of MDIO-64Cu-DOTA for identification of vulnerable atherosclerotic plaques via the targeting of macrophages.  相似文献   
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Early diagnosis and treatment of rheumatoid arthritis are associated with improved outcomes but current diagnostic tools such as rheumatoid factor or anti-citrullinated protein antibodies have shown limited sensitivity. In this pilot study we set out to establish a panel of urinary biomarkers associated with rheumatoid arthritis using capillary electrophoresis coupled to mass spectrometry. We compared the urinary proteome of 33 participants of the Scottish Early Rheumatoid Arthritis inception cohort study with 30 healthy controls and identified 292 potential rheumatoid arthritis-specific peptides. Amongst them, 39 were used to create a classifier model using support vector machine algorithms. Specific peptidic fragments were differentially excreted between groups; fragments of protein S100-A9 and gelsolin were less abundant in rheumatoid arthritis while fragments of uromodulin, complement C3 and fibrinogen were all increasingly excreted. The model generated was subsequently tested in an independent test-set of 31 samples. The classifier demonstrated a sensitivity of 88% and a specificity of 93% in diagnosing the condition, with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.93 (p<0.0001). These preliminary results suggest that urinary biomarkers could be useful in the early diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis. Further studies are currently being undertaken in larger cohorts of patients with rheumatoid arthritis and other athridities to assess the potential of the urinary peptide based classifier in the early detection of rheumatoid arthritis.  相似文献   
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Atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS) is a thrombotic microangiopathy associated with mutations in complement proteins, most frequently in the main plasma alternative pathway regulator factor H (FH). The hotspot for the FH mutations is in domains 19–20 (FH19–20) that are indispensable for FH activity on C3b bound covalently to host cells. In aHUS, down-regulation of cell-bound C3b by FH is impaired, but it is not clear whether this is due to an altered FH binding to surface-bound C3b or to cell surface structures. To explore the molecular pathogenesis of aHUS we tested binding of 14 FH19–20 point mutants to C3b and its C3d fragment, mouse glomerular endothelial cells (mGEnC-1), and heparin. The cell binding correlated well, but not fully, with heparin binding and the cell binding site was overlapping but distinct from the C3b/C3d binding site that was shown to extend to domain 19. Our results show that aHUS-associated FH19–20 mutants have different combinations of three primary defects: impaired binding to C3b/C3d, impaired binding to the mGEnC-1 cells/heparin, and, as a novel observation, an enhanced mGEnC-1 cell or heparin binding. We propose a model of the molecular pathogenesis of aHUS where all three mechanisms lead eventually to impaired control of C3b on the endothelial cell surfaces. Based on the results with the aHUS patient mutants and the overlap in FH19–20 binding sites for mGEnC-1/heparin and C3b/C3d we conclude that binding of FH19–20 to C3b/C3d is essential for target discrimination by the alternative pathway.Atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS)2 is a familial disease characterized by erythrocyte fragmentation and hematuria, damaged renal endothelium, vascular microthrombi, and thrombocytopenia (1). The syndrome leads ultimately to end-stage renal disease with a high mortality rate (2). In aHUS cases point mutations have been found in complement components C3, factor B, CD46, factor I, and factor H (FH), all of which play a role in the activation or control of the alternative pathway (38). More than half of the mutations have been found to originate in the HF1 gene that encodes FH and FH-like protein 1.The alternative pathway is initiated spontaneously by hydrolysis of C3 to C3H2O that forms the C3-convertase C3H2OBb (9, 10). This enzyme complex converts numerous C3 molecules to C3b that are covalently bound onto practically any nearby surface (11). On a so-called activator surface, such as a microbe, the surface-bound C3b molecules are not efficiently eliminated and therefore new C3bBb complexes are formed leading to more C3b depositions and eventually effective opsonization or damage of the target cell. On non-activator surfaces, such as viable self (host) cells, factor I cleaves C3b to inactive C3b (iC3b) in the presence of one of the cofactors (CD46, CD35, FH, and FHL-1) (1216). FH is the only one of these cofactors that mediates recognition of self-surfaces making the alternative pathway capable of discriminating between activating and non-activating surfaces (1719).The two main functions of FH are to prevent the alternative pathway activation in plasma and on self-surfaces. This 150-kDa glycoprotein consists of 20 tandemly arranged short consensus repeat domains that are composed of ∼60 amino acids. Domains 1–4 are essential for the cofactor and decay accelerating activity (20). In the middle region of FH (domains 5–15) there are two binding sites for C-reactive protein (21), one or two sites for glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) (2225), and one site for C3c part of C3b (C3b/C3c) (25, 26). The C-terminal domains 19–20 (FH19–20) possess binding sites for the thiol ester domain of C3b (C3d or C3dg, TED domain) and GAGs (26, 27).The most common types of mutations found in aHUS are FH missense mutations located within FH19–20 that was recently solved as crystal and NMR structures (2, 28, 29). The C terminus of FH is crucial in self-cell protection as demonstrated by the severity of the aHUS cases and also in a recent mouse model of aHUS where domains 16–20 had been deleted (30, 31). Histopathology of aHUS in these mice had all the characteristics of human aHUS being concordant with the similarity of binding sites for C3b, heparin, and human umbilical vein endothelial cells between human and mouse FH domains 18–20 (32). Binding of mouse or human FH to glomerular endothelial cells has not been characterized despite the fact that in aHUS damage occurs mainly in the small vessels, especially in the glomeruli.The molecular pathogenesis leading to the clinical aHUS in patients with FH mutations remains elusive. The suggested molecular mechanisms for some aHUS-associated mutations include defective binding of the mutated FH to GAGs, endothelial cells, or C3b/C3d (28, 29, 33, 34). The aim of this study was to define the effects of nine aHUS-associated FH mutations and five other structurally closely located mutations on binding of FH19–20 to C3b, C3d, mouse glomerular endothelial cells, and heparin. We identified three primary defects of the mutants: impaired C3b/C3d binding, enhanced mGEnC-1/heparin binding, and impaired mGEnC-1/heparin binding that could lead via three mechanisms to incapability of FH to eliminate C3b on plasma-exposed self-cells. The results clarify the mechanism of target discrimination of the alternative pathway by the C terminus of FH.  相似文献   
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Background

This retrospective study was undertaken to determine if the plasma circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) level and tumor biological features in patients with advanced solid tumors affected the detection of genomic alterations (GAs) by a plasma ctDNA assay.

Method

Cell-free DNA (cfDNA) extracted from frozen plasma (N?=?35) or fresh whole blood (N?=?90) samples were subjected to a 62-gene hybrid capture-based next-generation sequencing assay FoundationACT. Concordance was analyzed for 51 matched FoundationACT and FoundationOne (tissue) cases. The maximum somatic allele frequency (MSAF) was used to estimate the amount of tumor fraction of cfDNA in each sample. The detection of GAs was correlated with the amount of cfDNA, MSAF, total tumor anatomic burden (dimensional sum), and total tumor metabolic burden (SUVmax sum) of the largest ten tumor lesions on PET/CT scans.

Results

FoundationACT detected GAs in 69 of 81 (85%) cases with MSAF >?0. Forty-two of 51 (82%) cases had ≥?1 concordance GAs matched with FoundationOne, and 22 (52%) matched to the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN)-recommended molecular targets. FoundationACT also detected 8 unique molecular targets, which changed the therapy in 7 (88%) patients who did not have tumor rebiopsy or sufficient tumor DNA for genomic profiling assay. In all samples (N?=?81), GAs were detected in plasma cfDNA from cancer patients with high MSAF quantity (P?=?0.0006) or high tumor metabolic burden (P?=?0.0006) regardless of cfDNA quantity (P?=?0.2362).

Conclusion

This study supports the utility of using plasma-based genomic assays in cancer patients with high plasma MSAF level or high tumor metabolic burden.
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A new series of potent 8-hydroxyquinolines was designed based on the newly resolved X-ray crystal structure of EGLN-1. Both alkyl and aryl 8-hydroxyquinoline-7-carboxyamides were good HIF-1alpha prolyl hydroxylase (EGLN) inhibitors. In subsequent VEGF induction assays, these exhibited potent VEGF activity. In addition, this class of compounds did show the ability to stabilize HIF-1alpha.  相似文献   
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