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11.
A quantitative analysis of the interplay of environment,neighborhood, and cell state in 3D spheroids
Vito RT Zanotelli Matthias Leutenegger XiaoKang Lun Fanny Georgi Natalie de Souza Bernd Bodenmiller 《Molecular systems biology》2020,16(12)
Cells react to their microenvironment by integrating external stimuli into phenotypic decisions via an intracellular signaling network. To analyze the interplay of environment, local neighborhood, and internal cell state effects on phenotypic variability, we developed an experimental approach that enables multiplexed mass cytometric imaging analysis of up to 240 pooled spheroid microtissues. We quantified the contributions of environment, neighborhood, and intracellular state to marker variability in single cells of the spheroids. A linear model explained on average more than half of the variability of 34 markers across four cell lines and six growth conditions. The contributions of cell‐intrinsic and environmental factors to marker variability are hierarchically interdependent, a finding that we propose has general implications for systems‐level studies of single‐cell phenotypic variability. By the overexpression of 51 signaling protein constructs in subsets of cells, we also identified proteins that have cell‐intrinsic and cell‐extrinsic effects. Our study deconvolves factors influencing cellular phenotype in a 3D tissue and provides a scalable experimental system, analytical principles, and rich multiplexed imaging datasets for future studies. 相似文献
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Cytochemical demonstration of hydrogen peroxide in polymorphonuclear leukocyte phagosomes 总被引:6,自引:1,他引:6 下载免费PDF全文
Phagocytosis by polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) is accompanied by specific morphological and metabolic events which may result in the killing of internalized micro-organism. Hydrogen peroxide is produced in increased amounts during phagocytosis (17) and in combination with myeloperoxidase and halide ions constitute a potent, microbicidal mechanism (8,9,11). There can be direct iodination of micro-organisms (10), or alternatively, other intermediate reaction products, i.e. chloramines and aldehydes (21), can exert a microbicidal effect. The H2O2-peroxidase-halide system is presumed to operate within the phagocytic vacuole (12,18). Myeloperoxidase, present in the primary granules of PMN, enters the phagocytic vacuole during degranulation (1,4,7), and halide ions are probably derived from the extracellular medium or are present in the PMN (see 11, 18). For the operation of this system in intact cells, the presence of H2O2 in the phagocytic vacuole is necessary, and indeed this has been suggested by the work of several investigators (12, 18, 21). In the present investigation, the diaminobenzidine reaction of Graham and Karnovsky (5), modified to utilize endogenous myeloperoxidase and hydrogen peroxide, has been applied to actively phagocytizing PMN to demonstrate cytochemically the presence of H2O2 in the phagocytic vacuole. 相似文献
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Both the Entamoeba histolytica lectin, a virulence factor for the causative
agent of amebiasis, and the mammalian hepatic lectin bind to
N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc) and galactose (Gal) nonreducing termini on
oligosaccharides, with preference for GalNAc. Polyvalent GalNAc-
derivatized neoglycoproteins have >1000-fold enhanced binding affinity
for both lectins (Adler,P., Wood,S.J., Lee,Y.C., Lee,R.T., Petri,W.A.,Jr.
and Schnaar,R.L.,1995, J. Biol. Chem ., 270, 5164-5171). Substructural
specificity studies revealed that the 3-OH and 4-OH groups of GalNAc were
required for binding to both lectins, whereas only the E.histolytica lectin
required the 6-OH group. Whereas GalNAc binds with 4-fold lower affinity to
the E.histolytica lectin than to the mammalian hepatic lectin,
galactosamine and N-benzoyl galactosamine bind with higher affinity to the
E. histolytica lectin. Therefore, a synthetic scheme for converting
polyamine carriers to poly-N-acyl galactosamine derivatives (linked through
the galactosamine primary amino group) was developed to test whether such
ligands would bind the E.histolytica lectin with high specificity and high
affinity. Contrary to expectations, polyvalent derivatives including
GalN6lys5, GalN4desmosine, GalN4StarburstTMdendrimer, and
GalN8StarburstTMdendrimer demonstrated highly enhanced binding to the
mammalian hepatic lectin but little or no enhancement of binding to the
E.histolytica lectin. We propose that the mammalian hepatic lectin binds
with greatest affinity to GalNAc "miniclusters," which mimic branched
termini of N-linked oligosaccharides, whereas the E.histolytica lectin
binds most effectively to "maxiclusters," which may mimic more widely
spaced GalNAc residues on intestinal mucins.
相似文献
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Ryan T. Cirz Floyd E. Romesberg 《Critical reviews in biochemistry and molecular biology》2013,48(5):341-354
ABSTRACTMutation is the driving force behind many processes linked to human disease, including cancer, aging, and the evolution of drug resistance. Mutations have traditionally been considered the inevitable consequence of replicating large genomes with polymerases of finite fidelity. Observations over the past several decades, however, have led to a new perspective on the process of mutagenesis. It has become clear that, under some circumstances, mutagenesis is a regulated process that requires the induction of pro-mutagenic enzymes and that, at least in bacteria, this induction may facilitate evolution. Herein, we review what is known about induced mutagenesis in bacteria as well as evidence that it contributes to the evolution of antibiotic resistance. Finally, we discuss the possibility that components of induced mutation pathways might be targeted for inhibition as a novel therapeutic strategy to prevent the evolution of antibiotic resistance. 相似文献
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Tobamoviruses, mostly isolated from solanaceous plants, may represent
ancient virus lineages that have codiverged with their hosts. Recently
completed nucleotide sequences of six nonsolanaceous tobamoviruses allowed
assessment of the codivergence hypothesis and support a third subgroup
within tobamoviruses. The genomic sequences of 12 tobamoviruses and the
partial sequences of 11 others have been analyzed. Comparisons of the
predicted protein sequences revealed three clusters of tobamoviruses,
corresponding to those infecting solanaceous species (subgroup 1), those
infecting cucurbits and legumes (subgroup 2), and those infecting
crucifers. The orchid-infecting odontoglossum ringspot tobamovirus was
associated with subgroup 1 genomes by its coat and movement protein
sequences, but with the crucifer-pathogenic tobamoviruses by the remainder
of its genome, suggesting that it is the progeny of a recombinant. For four
of five genomic regions, subgroup 1 and 3 genomes were equidistant from a
subgroup 2 genome chosen for comparison, suggesting uniform rates of
evolution. A phylogenetic tree of plant families based on the tobamoviruses
they harbor was congruent with that based on rubisco sequences but had a
different root, suggesting that codivergence was tempered by rare events of
viruses of one family colonizing another family. The proposed subgroup 3
viruses probably have an origin of virion assembly in the movement protein
gene, a large (25-codon) overlap of movement and coat protein open reading
frames, and a comparably shorter genome. Codon-position- dependent base
compositions and codon prevalences suggested that the coat protein frame of
the overlap region was ancestral. Bootstrapped parsimony analysis of the
nucleotides in the overlap region and of the sequences translated from the
-1 frame (the subgroup 3 movement protein frame) of this region produced
trees inconsistent with those deduced from other regions. The results are
consistent with a model in which a no or short overlap organization was
ancestral. Despite encoding of subgroup 2 and 3 movement protein C-termini
by nonhomologous nucleotides, weak similarities between their amino acid
sequences suggested convergent sequence evolution.
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