Conditional transgenic animals are useful tools that can be used to determine the detailed anatomic and molecular bases of sleep–wake regulation. This short review highlights some of the most recent molecular biological technologies for “systems-level” sleep research in freely behaving animals. These technical advances include a wide range of approaches from conditional deletion of genes based on the Cre/loxP technology to RNA interference to the in vivo reversible manipulation (silencing and activation) of neurons by tetracycline-controlled tetanus neurotoxin or the expression of genetically modified receptor-channel complexes. In combination with these advanced genetic techniques, adeno-associated viral vectors (AAVs) represent a versatile gene delivery system for stereotaxic-based brain microinjections and regionally restricted transduction of neuronal cell populations.
Life‐history theory assumes that reproduction and lifespan are constrained by trade‐offs which prevent their simultaneous increase. Recently, there has been considerable interest in the possibility that this cost of reproduction is mediated by oxidative stress. However, empirical tests of this theory have yielded equivocal support. We carried out a meta‐analysis to examine associations between reproduction and oxidative damage across markers and tissues. We show that oxidative damage is positively associated with reproductive effort across females of various species. Yet paradoxically, categorical comparisons of breeders versus non‐breeders reveal that transition to the reproductive state is associated with a step‐change reduction in oxidative damage in certain tissues and markers. Developing offspring may be particularly sensitive to harm caused by oxidative damage in mothers. Therefore, such reductions could potentially function to shield reproducing mothers, gametes and developing offspring from oxidative insults that inevitably increase as a consequence of reproductive effort. According to this perspective, we hypothesise that the cost of reproduction is mediated by dual impacts of maternally‐derived oxidative damage on mothers and offspring, and that mothers may be selected to diminish such damage. Such oxidative shielding may explain why many existing studies have concluded that reproduction has little or no oxidative cost. Future advance in life‐history theory therefore needs to take account of potential transgenerational impacts of the mechanisms underlying life‐history trade‐offs. 相似文献
Differences in lipid metabolism associate with age‐related disease development and lifespan. Inflammation is a common link between metabolic dysregulation and aging. Saturated fatty acids (FAs) initiate pro‐inflammatory signalling from many cells including monocytes; however, no existing studies have quantified age‐associated changes in individual FAs in relation to inflammatory phenotype. Therefore, we have determined the plasma concentrations of distinct FAs by gas chromatography in 26 healthy younger individuals (age < 30 years) and 21 healthy FA individuals (age > 50 years). Linear mixed models were used to explore the association between circulating FAs, age and cytokines. We showed that plasma saturated, poly‐ and mono‐unsaturated FAs increase with age. Circulating TNF‐α and IL‐6 concentrations increased with age, whereas IL‐10 and TGF‐β1 concentrations decreased. Oxidation of MitoSOX Red was higher in leucocytes from FA adults, and plasma oxidized glutathione concentrations were higher. There was significant colinearity between plasma saturated FAs, indicative of their metabolic relationships. Higher levels of the saturated FAs C18:0 and C24:0 were associated with lower TGF‐β1 concentrations, and higher C16:0 were associated with higher TNF‐α concentrations. We further examined effects of the aging FA profile on monocyte polarization and metabolism in THP1 monocytes. Monocytes preincubated with C16:0 increased secretion of pro‐inflammatory cytokines in response to phorbol myristate acetate‐induced differentiation through ceramide‐dependent inhibition of PPARγ activity. Conversely, C18:1 primed a pro‐resolving macrophage which was PPARγ dependent and ceramide dependent and which required oxidative phosphorylation. These data suggest that a midlife adult FA profile impairs the switch from proinflammatory to lower energy, requiring anti‐inflammatory macrophages through metabolic reprogramming. 相似文献
Plant and Soil - Root exudation is an important carbon (C) and energy source for soil microorganisms but quantifying its spatial distribution is challenging. We tested whether 14C imaging (analogue... 相似文献
Feral pigs damage the significant ecological and cultural values of tropical Australian wetlands. Control measures such as culling, baiting, and trapping can reduce overall pig populations, but do not eliminate the substantial physical damage to wetlands that can occur from just a few individuals. Exclusion fences have been adopted as a potential technique to prevent damage to selected wetlands. To test the effectiveness of exclusion fences we measured the physical damage caused by pigs to multiple wetlands in the Archer River catchment of tropical northern Australia. Wetlands were fenced using a typical cattle exclusion fence, a specific pig exclusion fence or had no fence. Initial analyses of these fence treatments showed no significant difference in the intensity of physical pig damage to exposed wetland sediments and fringing vegetation. However, several of the pig exclusion fences were found to have been compromised. Reanalysis indicated wetlands with functioning pig exclusion fences had no physical pig damage and this was significantly less damage than in all other treatments. In contrast, wetlands with compromised pig exclusion fences had damage that was statistically equivalent to sites without fences or with cattle exclusion fences, but in individual cases had the worst damage recorded in any of the treatments. Compromised pig exclusion fencing of wetlands can thus be worse than having no fencing at all. This suggests that the successful prevention of pig damage to wetlands by exclusion fences requires ongoing and effective fence monitoring and maintenance regimes.
The muscle weakness in myasthenia gravis (MG) is mediated by autoantibodies against the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) at the neuromuscular junction. Production of these pathogenic autoantibodies is believed to be associated with germinal centers (GC) and anti-AChR-secreting plasma cells in the hyperplastic thymus of patients with early onset MG (EOMG). Here, we describe the repertoire of rearranged heavy chain V genes and their clonal origins in GC from a typical EOMG patient. Three hundred fifteen rearranged Ig V(H) genes were amplified, cloned, and sequenced from sections of four thymic GC containing AChR-specific B cells. We found that thymic GC contain a remarkably heterogeneous population of B cells. Both naive and circulating memory B cells undergo Ag-driven clonal proliferation, somatic hypermutation, and selection. Numerous B cell clones were present, with no individual clone dominating the response. Comparisons of B cell clonal sequences from different GC and known anti-AChR Abs from other patients showed convergent mutations in the complementarity determining regions. These results are consistent with AChR driving an ongoing GC response in the thymus of EOMG patients. This is the first detailed analysis of B cell clones in human GC responding to a defined protein Ag, and the response we observed may reflect the effects of chronic stimulation by autoantigen. 相似文献
IL-1 is of utmost importance in the host response to immunological challenges. We identified and functionally characterized two novel IL-1 ligands termed IL-1delta and IL-1epsilon. Northern blot analyses show that these IL-1s are highly abundant in embryonic tissue and tissues containing epithelial cells (i.e., skin, lung, and stomach). In extension, quantitative real-time PCR revealed that of human skin-derived cells, only keratinocytes but not fibroblasts, endothelial cells, or melanocytes express IL-1delta and epsilon. Levels of keratinocyte IL-1delta are approximately 10-fold higher than those of IL-1epsilon. In vitro stimulation of keratinocytes with IL-1beta/TNF-alpha significantly up-regulates the expression of IL-1epsilon mRNA, and to a lesser extent of IL-1delta mRNA. In NF-kappaB-luciferase reporter assays, we demonstrated that IL-1delta and epsilon proteins do not initiate a functional response via classical IL-1R pairs, which confer responsiveness to IL-1alpha and beta or IL-18. However, IL-1epsilon activates NF-kappaB through the orphan IL-1R-related protein 2 (IL-1Rrp2), whereas IL-1delta, which shows striking homology to IL-1 receptor antagonist, specifically and potently inhibits this IL-1epsilon response. In lesional psoriasis skin, characterized by chronic cutaneous inflammation, the mRNA expression of both IL-1 ligands as well as IL-1Rrp2 are increased relative to normal healthy skin. In total, IL-1delta and epsilon and IL-1Rrp2 may constitute an independent signaling system, analogous to IL-1alphabeta/receptor agonist and IL-1R1, that is present in epithelial barriers of our body and takes part in local inflammatory responses. 相似文献