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91.
Flash-induced photosynthetic oxygen evolution was measured in cells and thylakoid preparations from the coccoid cyanobacteria Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 and Synechococcus sp. PCC 7942 and from the filamentous cyanobacterium Oscillatoria chalybea. The resulting characteristic flash patterns from these cyanobacteria can be chemically altered by addition of exogenously added substances like CCCP, DCPiP and inorganic salts. Potassium chloride, manganese sulfate and calcium chloride affected the sequences by specific increases in the flash yield and/or effects on the transition parameters. Chloride appeared to exert the strongest stimulatory effect on the oxygen yield. In comparison to chloride, both manganese and calcium did not significantly stimulate the flash amplitudes as such, but improved the functioning of the oxygen evolving complex by decreasing the miss parameter alpha. Particular effects were observed with respect to the time constants of the relaxation kinetics of the first two flash signals Y1/Y2 of the cyanobacterial patterns. In the presence of the investigated chemicals the amplitudes of the first two flash signals (Y2 in particular) were increased and the relaxation kinetics were enhanced so that the time constant became about identical to the conditions of steady state oxygen flash amplitudes. The results provide further evidence against a possible participation of either PS I or respiratory processes to Y1/Y2 of cyanobacterial flash patterns. Dramatic effects were observed when protoplasts from Oscillatoria chalybea or cells from Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 and Synechococcus sp. PCC 7942 were exposed to weak far red background illumination. Under these conditions, Y2 (and to a smaller extent Y1) of otherwise unchanged flash sequences were specifically modified. Y2 was substantially increased and again the relaxation kinetics were accelerated making the signal indistinguishable from a Y(SS) signal. From the mathematical fit of the sequences we conclude that S2 contributes to 10-20% of the S-state distribution (in comparison to 0% in the control). Thus, far red background illumination might represent a valuable means for photosynthetic investigations where high amounts of S2 are required like e. g. EPR measurements. In such experiments the corresponding EPR signals appeared substantially enhanced following far red preillumination (Ahrling and Bader, unpublished observations). Our results clearly show that the 'controversial results' from parts of the literature suggesting the participation of different mechanisms (net oxygen evolution, inhibited uptake processes etc.) are not required to explain the flash-induced oxygen evolution in cyanobacteria: the seemingly 'incompatible' conditions and conformations can be perfectly interconverted by different modulation techniques (chemicals, far red) of the respective redox condition within the water oxidation complex of photosynthesis.  相似文献   
92.
Two high-resolution structures have been obtained for dihydrofolate reductase from the hyperthermophilic bacterium Thermotoga maritima in its unliganded state, and in its ternary complex with the cofactor NADPH and the inhibitor, methotrexate. While the overall fold of the hyperthermophilic enzyme is closely similar to monomeric mesophilic dihydrofolate reductase molecules, its quaternary structure is exceptional, in that T. maritima dihydrofolate reductase forms a highly stable homodimer. Here, the molecular reasons for the high intrinsic stability of the enzyme are elaborated and put in context with the available data on the physical parameters governing the folding reaction. The molecule is extremely rigid, even with respect to structural changes during substrate binding and turnover. Subunit cooperativity can be excluded from structural and biochemical data. Major contributions to the high intrinsic stability of the enzyme result from the formation of the dimer. Within the monomer, only subtle stabilizing interactions are detectable, without clear evidence for any of the typical increments of thermal stabilization commonly reported for hyperthermophilic proteins. The docking of the subunits is optimized with respect to high packing density in the dimer interface, additional salt-bridges and beta-sheets. The enzyme does not show significant structural changes upon binding its coenzyme, NADPH, and the inhibitor, methotrexate. The active-site loop, which is known to play an important role in catalysis in mesophilic dihydrofolate reductase molecules, is rearranged, participating in the association of the subunits; it no longer participates in catalysis.  相似文献   
93.
Mechanotransduction events in articular cartilage may be resolved into extracellular components followed by intracellular signalling events, which finally lead to altered cell response. Cell deformation is one of the former components, which has been examined using a model involving bovine chondrocytes seeded in agarose constructs. Viable fluorescent labels and confocal laser scanning microscopy were used to examine cellular and sub-cellular morphology. It was observed that cell size increased up to day 6 in culture, associated with an increase in the contents of proteoglycan and collagen. In addition, the organisation of the cytoskeleton components, described using a simple scoring scale, revealed temporal changes for actin fibres, microtubules and vimentin intermediate filaments. The constructs on day 1 were also subjected to unconfined compressive strains. A series of confocal scans through the centre of individual cells revealed a change from a spherical to an elliptical morphology. This was demonstrated by a change in diameter ratio, from a mean value of 1.00 at 0% strain to 0.60 at 25% strain. Using simple equations, the volume and surface areas were also estimated from the scans. Although the former revealed little change with increasing construct strain, surface area appeared to increase significantly. However further examination, using transmission electron microscopy to reveal fine ultrastructural detail at the cell periphery, suggest that this increase may be due to an unravelling of folds at the cell membrane. Cell deformation was associated with a decrease in the nuclear diameter, in the direction of the applied strain. The resulting nuclear strain in one direction increased in constructs compressed at later time points, although its values at all three assessment times were less than the corresponding values for cell strain. It is suggested that the nuclear behaviour may be a direct result of temporal changes observed in the organisation of the cytoskeleton. The study demonstrated that the chondrocyte-agarose model provides a useful system for the examination of compression events at both cellular and sub-cellular levels.  相似文献   
94.
The main mechanism causing catabolite repression by glucose and other carbon sources transported by the phosphotransferase system (PTS) in Escherichia coli involves dephosphorylation of enzyme IIAGlc as a result of transport and phosphorylation of PTS carbohydrates. Dephosphorylation of enzyme IIAGlc leads to 'inducer exclusion': inhibition of transport of a number of non-PTS carbon sources (e.g. lactose, glycerol), and reduced adenylate cyclase activity. In this paper, we show that the non-PTS carbon source glucose 6-phosphate can also cause inducer exclusion. Glucose 6-phosphate was shown to cause inhibition of transport of lactose and the non-metabolizable lactose analogue methyl-β- D -thiogalactoside (TMG). Inhibition was absent in mutants that lacked enzyme IIAGlc or were insensitive to inducer exclusion because enzyme IIAGlc could not bind to the lactose carrier. Furthermore, we showed that glucose 6-phosphate caused dephosphorylation of enzyme IIAGlc. In a mutant insensitive to enzyme IIAGlc-mediated inducer exclusion, catabolite repression by glucose 6-phosphate in lactose-induced cells was much weaker than that in the wild-type strain, showing that inducer exclusion is the most important mechanism contributing to catabolite repression in lactose-induced cells. We discuss an expanded model of enzyme IIAGlc-mediated catabolite repression which embodies repression by non- PTS carbon sources.  相似文献   
95.
Mitochondrially bound dihydroorotate-ubiquinone oxidoreductase (dihydroorotate dehydrogenase, EC 1.3.99.11) catalyzes the fourth sequential step in thede novosynthesis of uridine monophosphate. Based on the recent functional expression of the complete rat dihydroorotate dehydrogenase by means of the baculovirus expression vector system inTrichoplusia nicells, a procedure is described that allows the purification of baculovirus expressed enzyme protein fused to a carboxy-terminal tag of eight histidines. Extracts from mitochondria ofSpodoptera frugiperdacells infected with the recombinant virus using Triton X-100 were loaded onto Ni2+-nitrilotriacetic acid agarose and histidine-tagged rat protein was selectively eluted with imidazole-containing buffer. In view of ourpreviously published work, the quality of the electrophoretic homogenous rat enzyme was markedly improved; specific activity was 130– 150 μmol dihydroorotate/min per milligram; and the stoichiometry of flavin content was 0.8–1.1 mol/mol protein. Efforts to generate mammalian dihydroorotate dehydrogenases with low production costs from bacteria resulted in successful overexpression of the carboxy-terminal-modified rat and human dihydroorotate dehydrogenase in XL-1 Blue cells. By employing the metal chelate affinity chromatography under native conditions, the histidine-tagged human enzyme was purified with a specific activity of 150 μmol/min/mg and the rat enzyme with 83 μmol/min/mg, respectively, at pH 8.0–8.1 optimum. Kinetic constants of the recombinant histidine-tagged rat enzyme from bacteria (dihydroorotate,Km= 14.6 μM; electron acceptor decylubiquinone,Km= 9.5 μM) were close to those reported for the enzyme from insect cells, with or without the affinity tag. HPLC analyses identified flavin mononucleotide as cofactor of the rat enzyme; UV-vis and fluorometric analyses verified a flavin/protein ratio of 0.8–1.1 mol/mol. By spectral analyses of the functional flavin with the native human enzyme, the interaction of the pharmacological inhibitors Leflunomide and Brequinar with their target could be clarified as interference with the transfer of electrons from the flavin to the quinone. The combination of the bacterial expression system and metal chelate affinity chomatography offers an improved means to purify large quantities of mammalian membrane-bound dihydroorotate dehydrogenases which, by several criteria, possesses the same functional activities as non-histidine-tagged recombinant enzymes.  相似文献   
96.
Several dog breeds are susceptible to developing primary angle closure glaucoma (PACG), which suggests a genetic basis for the disease. We have identified a four-generation Basset Hound pedigree with characteristic autosomal recessive PACG that closely recapitulates PACG in humans. Our aim is to utilize gene mapping and whole exome sequencing approaches to identify PACG-causing sequence variants in the Basset. Extensive clinical phenotyping of all pedigree members was conducted. SNP-chip genotyping was carried out in 9 affected and 15 unaffected pedigree members. Two-point and multipoint linkage analyses of genome-wide SNP data were performed using Superlink-Online SNP-1.1 and a locus was mapped to chromosome 19q with a maximum LOD score of 3.24. The locus contains 12 Ensemble predicted canine genes and is syntenic to a region on chromosome 2 in the human genome. Using exome-sequencing analysis, a possibly damaging, non-synonymous variant in the gene Nebulin (NEB) was found to segregate with PACG which alters a phylogenetically conserved Lysine residue. The association of this variants with PACG was confirmed in a secondary cohort of unrelated Basset Hounds (p = 3.4 × 10-4, OR = 15.3 for homozygosity). Nebulin, a protein that promotes the contractile function of sarcomeres, was found to be prominently expressed in the ciliary muscles of the anterior segment. Our findings may provide insight into the molecular mechanisms that underlie PACG. The phenotypic similarities of disease presentation in dogs and humans may enable the translation of findings made in this study to patients with PACG.  相似文献   
97.
A deficit in brain serotonin is thought to be associated with deteriorated stress coping behaviour, affective disorders and exaggerated violence. We challenged this hypothesis in mice with a brain-specific serotonin depletion caused by a tryptophan hydroxylase 2 (TPH2) deficiency. We tested TPH2-deficient (Tph2−/–) animals in two social situations. As juveniles, Tph2−/− mice displayed reduced social contacts, whereas ultrasonic vocalizations (USVs) were unchanged within same-sex same-genotype pairings. Interestingly, juvenile females vocalized more than males across genotypes. Sexually naive adult males were exposed to fresh male or female urine, followed by an interaction with a conspecific, and re-exposed to urine. Although Tph2−/− mice showed normal sexual preference, they were hyper-aggressive towards their interaction partners and did not vocalize in response to sexual cues. These results highlight that central serotonin is essential for prosocial behaviour, especially USV production in adulthood, but not for sexual preference.  相似文献   
98.
The aim of this study was to evaluate a novel combination of Soluplus® and hypromellose acetate succinate (HPMCAS-HF) polymers for solubility enhancement as well as enhanced physicochemical stability of the produced amorphous solid dispersions. This was accomplished by converting the poorly water-soluble crystalline form of carbamazepine into a more soluble amorphous form within the polymeric blends. Carbamazepine (CBZ), a Biopharmaceutics Classification System class II active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) with multiple polymorphs, was utilized as a model drug. Hot-melt extrusion (HME) processing was used to prepare solid dispersions utilizing blends of polymers. Drug loading showed a significant effect on the dissolution rate of CBZ in all of the tested ratios of Soluplus® and HPMCAS-HF. CBZ was completely miscible in the polymeric blends of Soluplus® and HPMCAS-HF up to 40% drug loading. The extrudates were characterized by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), X-ray diffraction (XRD), Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy and dissolution studies. DSC and XRD data confirmed the formation of amorphous solid dispersions of CBZ in the polymeric blends of Soluplus® and HPMCAS-HF. Drug loading and release of CBZ was increased with Soluplus® (when used as the primary matrix polymer) when formulations contained Soluplus® with 7–21% (w/w) HPMCAS-HF. In addition, this blend of polymers was found to be physically and chemically stable at 40°C, 75% RH over 12 months without any dissolution rate changes.KEY WORDS: carbamazepine, hot-melt extrusion, HPMCAS-HF, Soluplus®, stability  相似文献   
99.
Reverse phase protein arrays (RPPA) are an established tool for measuring the expression and activation status of multiple proteins in parallel using only very small amounts of tissue. Several studies have demonstrated the value of this technique for signaling pathway analysis using proteins extracted from fresh frozen (FF) tissue in line with validated antibodies for this tissue type; however, formalin fixation and paraffin embedding (FFPE) is the standard method for tissue preservation in the clinical setting. Hence, we performed RPPA to measure profiles for a set of 300 protein markers using matched FF and FFPE tissue specimens to identify which markers performed similarly using the RPPA technique in fixed and unfixed tissues. Protein lysates were prepared from matched FF and FFPE tissue specimens of individual tumors taken from three different xenograft models of human cancer. Materials from both untreated mice and mice treated with either anti-HER3 or bispecific anti-IGF-1R/EGFR monoclonal antibodies were analyzed. Correlations between signals from FF and FFPE tissue samples were investigated. Overall, 60 markers were identified that produced comparable profiles between FF and FFPE tissues, demonstrating significant correlation between the two sample types. The top 25 markers also showed significance after correction for multiple testing. The panel of markers covered several clinically relevant tumor signaling pathways and both phosphorylated and nonphosphorylated proteins were represented. Biologically relevant changes in marker expression were noted when RPPA profiles from treated and untreated xenografts were compared. These data demonstrate that, using appropriately selected antibodies, RPPA analysis from FFPE tissue is well feasible and generates biologically meaningful information. The identified panel of markers that generate similar profiles in matched fixed and unfixed tissue samples may be clinically useful for pharmacodynamic studies of drug effect using FFPE tissues.Many human diseases are characterized by abnormalities in complex signaling pathways (1). The expression and activation status of proteins from these deregulated pathways has traditionally been analyzed using single marker techniques such as immunohistochemistry and Western blotting. Although these techniques have provided valuable information on the molecular abnormalities underlying human disease, they are labor intensive, have a low throughput, and often require high sample volume. Furthermore, techniques such as Western blotting are not applicable in the routine clinical setting. Miniaturized parallel immunoassay techniques have been developed in recent years and have played a pivotal role in biomarker discovery (2). Antibody arrays enable multiple potential disease markers to be investigated in a single sample in parallel (3). Beyond this, Reverse Phase Protein Arrays (RPPA)1 are sensitive high throughput tools that can quantify protein expression levels and activation status (posttranslational modifications such as phosphorylation) in multiple experimental samples simultaneously. The technique requires only minute amounts of samples, printed as lysate arrays onto slides, and hundreds of markers of interest can be investigated, array by array, in a miniaturized dot blot manner. Numerous reports have demonstrated that RPPA can be applied to various sources of cells and tissues to analyze protein profiles, signaling pathway networks, and for the identification of biomarkers (413). A recently published workshop report reviews the full potential and advances of RPPA for use in clinical, translational, and basic research (11).In oncology, the parallel profiling of multiple protein markers is particularly desirable to study tumor initiation and progression, to classify tumor disease states on the molecular level, and to discover and monitor biomarkers that can predict therapeutic response or tumor recurrence (1416). The study of signaling response and analysis of pharmacodynamic (PD) markers upon treatment using in vitro and in vivo test systems (e.g. cell line or patient derived xenograft tumor models) is an established component of preclinical and early clinical drug development. These techniques can provide evidence of target pathway modulation for new therapeutic lead candidate compounds and provide valuable information on the drug mode of action (17), especially in the translational phase. Multiplex analyses of PD biomarkers by RPPA have been performed in vitro using cancer cell lines (18, 19) as well as in patient-derived tumor tissue and blood samples (20, 21) to assess response to treatment and target inhibition. A combination of RPPA signaling pathway mapping and functional PET imaging has recently been successfully evaluated in xenograft models as an early response PD marker for anti-cancer drug efficacy (13).Translating miniaturized multiple protein analysis platforms-such as RPPA - from preclinical to clinical applicability is highly desirable; however, issues such as the limited amount of available clinical samples and tumor heterogeneity must first be addressed. Furthermore, most studies of RPPA in tumor tissue to date have been conducted using proteins extracted from fresh-frozen (FF) tissue specimens; whereas, formalin fixation and paraffin embedding (FFPE) is the standard method for tissue preservation used in clinical pathology laboratories. FFPE yields excellent tissue architecture for histological assessment and enables analysis of individual proteins in situ by techniques such as immunohistochemistry. However, formalin fixation leads to extensive protein–protein and protein–nucleic acid cross-linking (22), which can hamper protein extraction and reduce both the overall yield of extracted protein and the profile of proteins detectable by proteomic techniques (23, 24). Furthermore, formalin-induced cross-linking induces conformational changes in protein structure that can alter the immunoreactivity of some proteins in situ by hiding or altering peptide epitopes (25, 26). Such artifacts are absent from snap-frozen tissue; therefore, protein profiles obtained from FF tissue are likely to reflect the in vivo biology of the tumor more closely. However, FF tumor tissue is not widely available because it is costly to collect and maintain in the clinical setting. FFPE tissue samples are routinely archived by nearly every hospital and offer a unique opportunity to study thousands of samples retrospectively with extensive clinical records and follow-up information.Several groups have now established protocols for retrieving cross-linked proteins from fixed tissues (2733). These methods are mainly based on the use of concentrated ionic detergents and high temperature protocols closely related to the antigen retrieval methods developed for immunohistochemistry. These studies show that obtaining nondegraded, full-length proteins from FFPE tissues for multiplex analyses is feasible (2733). More recently, protein extraction techniques optimized for fixed samples have been used to successfully conduct RPPA using FFPE tissue biopsies from different cancer types (3440). Guo et al. systematically investigated several protein extraction methods and demonstrated that RPPA of FFPE materials is feasible, reproducible and can generate biologically relevant protein profiles (41). Other studies have confirmed the validity of this approach and shown that data generated from RPPA analyses of FFPE tissue demonstrate good concordance with traditional immunohistochemistry markers such as HER2 protein in breast cancer (34, 40). However, to date, analyses have been performed only for a limited set of protein markers.To evaluate whether analysis of a broader panel of protein markers is feasible and generates meaningful data from FFPE tumor tissue sections, we conducted RPPA on matched samples of FF and FFPE tissues using a set of 300 markers, the largest panel reported to date. Our aim was to identify markers that performed similarly when comparing the protein profiles measured in protein extracts from matched FF and FFPE tissue, using RPPA assays established for use in frozen tissues. Correlating selected markers and assays in such a way should qualify RPPA for further use with FFPE tissues of clinical relevance, e.g. in PD marker studies. In this paper, we have specifically focused on the technical issues relevant for using the RPPA platform in a clinical setting, and did not address the biology of the test systems used in detail. However, the models used have been pre-characterized to identify key signaling parameters in context of targeted drug treatment (42). We conducted a systematic comparison of RPPA protein profiles in matched FF and FFPE tumor tissues resected from three different xenograft models of human cancer, each treated with targeted therapeutic antibodies that have previously been shown to achieve tumor growth inhibition. Furthermore, we investigated the effect of targeted drug treatment on protein expression and activation status, and the concordance of matched FF and FFPE tissue RPPA profiles. Finally, with one of the applied tumor models, we compared a set of protein profiles measured with two different multiple assay platforms - the RPPA and the Luminex Bio-Plex system, and discuss their relevance with respect to the analysis of FFPE tissue.  相似文献   
100.
Successful control of falciparum malaria depends greatly on treatment with artemisinin combination therapies. Thus, reports that resistance to artemisinins (ARTs) has emerged, and that the prevalence of this resistance is increasing, are alarming. ART resistance has recently been linked to mutations in the K13 propeller protein. We undertook a detailed kinetic analysis of the drug responses of K13 wild-type and mutant isolates of Plasmodium falciparum sourced from a region in Cambodia (Pailin). We demonstrate that ART treatment induces growth retardation and an accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins, indicative of a cellular stress response that engages the ubiquitin/proteasome system. We show that resistant parasites exhibit lower levels of ubiquitinated proteins and delayed onset of cell death, indicating an enhanced cell stress response. We found that the stress response can be targeted by inhibiting the proteasome. Accordingly, clinically used proteasome inhibitors strongly synergize ART activity against both sensitive and resistant parasites, including isogenic lines expressing mutant or wild-type K13. Synergy is also observed against Plasmodium berghei in vivo. We developed a detailed model of parasite responses that enables us to infer, for the first time, in vivo parasite clearance profiles from in vitro assessments of ART sensitivity. We provide evidence that the clinical marker of resistance (delayed parasite clearance) is an indirect measure of drug efficacy because of the persistence of unviable parasites with unchanged morphology in the circulation, and we suggest alternative approaches for the direct measurement of viability. Our model predicts that extending current three-day ART treatment courses to four days, or splitting the doses, will efficiently clear resistant parasite infections. This work provides a rationale for improving the detection of ART resistance in the field and for treatment strategies that can be employed in areas with ART resistance.  相似文献   
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