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101.
Altered brain cholesterol homeostasis plays a key role in neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease (AD). For a long time, the blood–brain barrier (BBB) was basically considered as a barrier isolating the brain from circulating cholesterol, however, several lines of evidence now suggest that the BBB strictly regulates the exchanges of sterol between the brain and the peripheral circulation. Oxysterols, synthesized by neurons or by peripheral cells, cross the BBB easily and modulate the expression of several enzymes, receptors and transporters which are involved not only in cholesterol metabolism but also in other brain functions. This review article deals with the way oxysterols impact BBB cells. These perspectives open new routes for designing certain therapeutical approaches that target the BBB so that the onset and/or progression of brain diseases such as AD may be modulated.  相似文献   
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Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium is a food-borne pathogen that causes severe gastroenteritis. The ability of Salmonella to cause disease depends on two type III secretion systems (T3SSs) encoded in two distinct Salmonella pathogenicity islands, 1 and 2 (SPI1 and SPI2, respectively). S. Typhimurium encodes a solo LuxR homolog, SdiA, which can detect the acyl-homoserine lactones (AHLs) produced by other bacteria and upregulate the rck operon and the srgE gene. SrgE is predicted to encode a protein of 488 residues with a coiled-coil domain between residues 345 and 382. In silico studies have provided conflicting predictions as to whether SrgE is a T3SS substrate. Therefore, in this work, we tested the hypothesis that SrgE is a T3SS effector by two methods, a β-lactamase activity assay and a split green fluorescent protein (GFP) complementation assay. SrgE with β-lactamase fused to residue 40, 100, 150, or 300 was indeed expressed and translocated into host cells, but SrgE with β-lactamase fused to residue 400 or 488 was not expressed, suggesting interference by the coiled-coil domain. Similarly, SrgE with GFP S11 fused to residue 300, but not to residue 488, was expressed and translocated into host cells. With both systems, translocation into host cells was dependent upon SPI2. A phylogenetic analysis indicated that srgE is found only within Salmonella enterica subspecies. It is found sporadically within both typhoidal and nontyphoidal serovars, although the SrgE protein sequences found within typhoidal serovars tend to cluster separately from those found in nontyphoidal serovars, suggesting functional diversification.  相似文献   
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Among the sculptures adorning the former building of the Faculties of Medicine and Sciences (1893) in Saragossa (Spain) is one that represents a pterosaur. It is a work by D. Lasuén based on one of the first, but little known, restorations of these animals, drawn and engraved by T. Susemihl more than half a century before. Although it seems out of place, this sculpture was simply seen as a symbol of zoology. We suggest that it may have several significations. Besides embodying the animal kingdom, it may have been a surrogate of the dragon and thus a reference to the House of Aragon through its dragon-slaying holy patron, Saint George.  相似文献   
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Transmission of the phytopathogenic mollicutes, spiroplasmas, and phytoplasmas by their insect vectors mainly depends on their ability to pass through gut cells, to multiply in various tissues, and to traverse the salivary gland cells. The passage of these different barriers suggests molecular interactions between the plant mollicute and the insect vector that regulate transmission. In the present study, we focused on the interaction between Spiroplasma citri and its leafhopper vector, Circulifer haematoceps. An in vitro protein overlay assay identified five significant binding activities between S. citri proteins and insect host proteins from salivary glands. One insect protein involved in one binding activity was identified by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) as actin. Confocal microscopy observations of infected salivary glands revealed that spiroplasmas colocated with the host actin filaments. An S. citri actin-binding protein of 44 kDa was isolated by affinity chromatography and identified by LC-MS/MS as phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK). To investigate the role of the PGK-actin interaction, we performed competitive binding and internalization assays on leafhopper cultured cell lines (Ciha-1) in which His6-tagged PGK from S. citri or purified PGK from Saccharomyces cerevisiae was added prior to the addition of S. citri inoculum. The results suggested that exogenous PGK has no effect on spiroplasmal attachment to leafhopper cell surfaces but inhibits S. citri internalization, demonstrating that the process leading to internalization of S. citri in eukaryotic cells requires the presence of PGK. PGK, regardless of origin, reduced the entry of spiroplasmas into Ciha-1 cells in a dose-dependent manner.Phloem-feeding leafhoppers transmit plant pathogenic mollicutes, spiroplasmas, and phytoplasmas from plant to plant in a persistent propagative manner (26, 43). These phytopathogenic mollicutes are restricted to phloem and to certain vector tissues; thus, their vectors are phloem sap-feeding specialists. After being ingested from plant phloem by their insect vectors, they traverse the insect gut wall, move into the hemolymph, where they multiply, and invade the salivary glands (20, 33, 34, 36). During their movements in the insect vector until its transmission to a new host plant, spiroplasmas and phytoplasmas must traverse two major physical barriers, namely, the insect intestine and the salivary gland (35, 53). Until now, little was known about the molecular and cellular interactions contributing to the crossing of these physical barriers. Several lines of evidence suggest that host-pathogen interactions could be a prerequisite for invasion and colonization of insect vector organs (2, 48, 53). For human and animal pathogenic mollicutes, it is well established that successful colonization of the host cells requires adhesion as the first step. This event is mediated by surface proteins, and among these proteins adhesins play an important role (8, 44). Recently, it was reported that an antigenic membrane protein (Amp) of onion yellow phytoplasma interacts with the insect microfilament complex and that interaction plays an important role in determining the insect vector specificity (48). Several other immunodominant membrane proteins from various phytoplasmas have been mentioned in the literature as candidates for involvement in host-phytoplasma interactions (29, 30).Spiroplasma citri, the first phytopathogenic mollicute available in culture (45), has emerged as an outstanding model for studying spiroplasma interactions with its two hosts: the periwinkle plant and the insect vector Circulifer haematoceps. Following observations of membrane-bound cytoplasmic vesicles of midgut epithelium and salivary gland cells, S. citri was hypothesized to cross these physical barriers by receptor-mediated cell endocytosis (3, 33, 39). Several S. citri protein candidates have been identified as involved in transmission and, for a few of them, in an interaction with leafhopper vector proteins. Spiralin, the most abundant membrane protein, was suspected to be involved in the transmission for two reasons: (i) a S. citri spiralinless mutant was less effective in its transmissibility (19); (ii) spiralin acted in vitro as a lectin able to bind to glycoproteins of insect vectors and therefore might function as a ligand able to interact with leafhopper receptors (32). In addition, the ability of S. citri to be transmitted by C. haematoceps is clearly affected by disruption of a gene predicted to encode a lipoprotein with homology to a solute-binding protein of an ABC transporter (14). The proteome of nontransmissible S. citri strains specifically lacks adhesion-related proteins (ScARPs) and the membrane-associated protein P32 present in the proteome of transmissible strains (12, 13, 31). These proteins are encoded by plasmids pSci1 to -6 (46), which are present only in transmissible strains, and ScARPs share strong similarities with the adhesion-related protein SARP1 of S. citri strain BR3, in which the presence has been correlated to the ability for the spiroplasma to adhere to insect cells in vitro (9, 55). The specific interactions of S. citri with eukaryotic cells remain to be elucidated, but a combination of the effects of several proteins or a complex would be necessary to explain the invasion of a variety of host cell types by S. citri (33).Nevertheless, in the last sequence of events involved in insect vector transmission, the first contact and recognition for the efficient penetration of the salivary gland cells represents an essential step. In the present study, confocal images of infected salivary glands show the localization of S. citri cells along the actin filaments. We report the results of the first attempt to decipher the role of the spiroplasma''s phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK) in the internalization of S. citri in its insect vector''s cells.  相似文献   
106.
Functional metabolomics of skeletal muscle involves the simultaneous identification and quantification of a large number of metabolites. For this purpose, the extraction of metabolites from animal tissues is a crucial technical step that needs to be optimized. In this work, five extraction methods for skeletal muscle metabolome analysis using liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) were tested. Bird skeletal muscles sampled postmortem and quenched in liquid nitrogen were used. Three replicates of the same sample were extracted using the following solvent systems of varying polarity: boiling water (BW, +100 °C), cold pure methanol (CPM, −80 °C), methanol/chloroform/water (MCW, −20 °C), boiling ethanol (BE, +80 °C), and perchloric acid (PCA, −20 °C). Three injections by extraction were performed. The BW extraction showed the highest recovery of metabolites with the lowest variability (<10%) except for creatine-phosphate (creatine-P). Considering yield (area of the peaks), reproducibility, and ease, the current experiment drew a scale for the muscle metabolome extraction starting from the best to the least convenient: BW > MCW > CPM > PCA ? BE. In addition, the semiquantification of metabolites in two muscles showing different metabolic and contractile properties was carried out after BW extraction and showed expected differences in metabolite contents, thereby validating the technique for biological investigations. In conclusion, the BW extraction is recommended for analysis of skeletal muscle metabolome except for creatine-P, which was poorly recovered with this technique.  相似文献   
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Recent developments of molecular tools have revolutionized our knowledge of microbial biodiversity by allowing detailed exploration of its different facets and generating unprecedented amount of data. One key issue with such large datasets is the development of diversity measures that cope with different data outputs and allow comparison of biodiversity across different scales. Diversity has indeed three components: local (α), regional (γ) and the overall difference between local communities (β). Current measures of microbial diversity, derived from several approaches, provide complementary but different views. They only capture the β component of diversity, compare communities in a pairwise way, consider all species as equivalent or lack a mathematically explicit relationship among the α, β and γ components. We propose a unified quantitative framework based on the Rao quadratic entropy, to obtain an additive decomposition of diversity (γ = α + β), so the three components can be compared, and that integrate the relationship (phylogenetic or functional) among Microbial Diversity Units that compose a microbial community. We show how this framework is adapted to all types of molecular data, and we highlight crucial issues in microbial ecology that would benefit from this framework and propose ready‐to‐use R‐functions to easily set up our approach.  相似文献   
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