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121.
In the context of cell biology, the term mesoscale describes length scales ranging from that of an individual cell, down to the size of the molecular machines. In this spatial regime, small building blocks self‐organise to form large, functional structures. A comprehensive set of rules governing mesoscale self‐organisation has not been established, making the prediction of many cell behaviours difficult, if not impossible. Our knowledge of mesoscale biology comes from experimental data, in particular, imaging. Here, we explore the application of soft X‐ray tomography (SXT) to imaging the mesoscale, and describe the structural insights this technology can generate. We also discuss how SXT imaging is complemented by the addition of correlative fluorescence data measured from the same cell. This combination of two discrete imaging modalities produces a 3D view of the cell that blends high‐resolution structural information with precise molecular localisation data.  相似文献   
122.
ABSTRACT

This article is about the ways the Drung (Dulong), a minority inhabiting a remote mountainous valley of Northwest Yunnan province (China), view the ‘natural world’ as part of a cosmological order in which human society is integrated. The article explores the principles of differentiation that preside over the modes of relation between the diverse components of this world, by paying close attention to subsistence activities. Until recently, the Drung people practised swidden agriculture, and hunting and collecting remained important secondary sources of food. These activities imply specific relationships with natural forces, deities and spirits, which constitute a socio-cultural means of accessing natural resources and obtaining prosperity, or ‘good fortune’. Four mutually non-exclusive modalities of transaction with these entities are identified, which capture the variability of peoples’ attitudes toward natural resources and ideas of social reproduction. Recent socio-economic reforms that have brought traditional cultivation to an end, threatening Drung people’s livelihood and culture, seem to influence the dominance of a certain modality of economic transaction.  相似文献   
123.
124.
The bivalve Codakia orbicularis, hosting sulfur-oxidizing gill endosymbionts, was starved (in artificial seawater filtered through a 0.22-μm-pore-size membrane) for a long-term experiment (4 months). The effects of starvation were observed using transmission electron microscopy, fluorescence in situ hybridization and catalyzed reporter deposition (CARD-FISH), and flow cytometry to monitor the anatomical and physiological modifications in the gill organization of the host and in the symbiotic population housed in bacteriocytes. The abundance of the symbiotic population decreased through starvation, with a loss of one-third of the bacterial population each month, as shown by CARD-FISH. At the same time, flow cytometry revealed significant changes in the physiology of symbiotic cells, with a decrease in cell size and modifications to the nucleic acid content, while most of the symbionts maintained a high respiratory activity (measured using the 5-cyano-2,3-ditolyl tetrazolium chloride method). Progressively, the number of symbiont subpopulations was reduced, and the subsequent multigenomic state, characteristic of this symbiont in freshly collected clams, turned into one and five equivalent genome copies for the two remaining subpopulations after 3 months. Concomitant structural modifications appeared in the gill organization. Lysosymes became visible in the bacteriocytes, while large symbionts disappeared, and bacteriocytes were gradually replaced by granule cells throughout the entire lateral zone. Those data suggested that host survival under these starvation conditions was linked to symbiont digestion as the main nutritional source.The entire marine Lucinidae family, found in a wide range of sulfidic habitats, lives in association with chemoautotrophic sulfide-oxidizing bacterial symbionts, generally hosted in the gills of the bivalve. Lucinids are usually found in shallow water, such as intertidal mud or seagrasses (4, 53), in deeper water, e.g., Bathyaustriella thionipta (30), and in deep oceans at a 2,000-m depth, i.e., Lucinoma kazani (21, 55). The chemoautotrophic endosymbionts involved in such relationships are always localized inside specialized cells called bacteriocytes, and they have been found in several genera of the Lucinidae family, such as Codakia (4, 28), Loripes (39, 43), Lucina, and Lucinoma (17). Sulfur granules inside the symbiont cytoplasm have been demonstrated in most of the investigated species. The intracellular symbionts take energy from the oxidation of reduced sulfur compounds (27, 56, 59) and synthesize organic molecules by CO2 fixation in a Calvin-Benson cycle, translocated to the host (18). This relationship between the host and its symbionts represents the autotrophic pathway for host nutrition (27). It has also been suggested that in symbiotic bivalves, intracellular digestion of the symbionts may be a nutrient source for the host, based on studies of hydrothermal vent and shallow water bivalves (6, 26, 39).The relative importance of the autotrophic versus heterotrophic nutritional pathway can be estimated by measuring the carbon isotope (δ-13C) ratios in the host tissue. Measuring this δ-13C ratio on a wide range of invertebrates suggested that bivalves, including members of the Lucinidae, that live in reduced sediment may obtain a significant proportion of their organic carbon from chemoautotrophic endosymbionts (4, 10, 51, 52, 57). This suggestion was in agreement with the reduced functional digestive system previously described for the Lucinidae family (2, 53). Structural and morphological studies of gills of a few lucinids (belonging to the genera Lucina and Lucinoma) strongly suggested that symbionts play an important role in host nutrition since they occupy about 30% of the gill tissue and produce most of the host energy (17). Nevertheless, an alternative pathway for feeding, i.e., heterotrophic particulate feeding, could occur in some of the lucinid bivalves, since diatoms were found in the stomach of some lucinids (57). Duplessis et al. (22) showed that particulate feeding could be an important part of the nutritional strategy in symbiont-bearing Lucinoma, as opposed to the anatomical features that gave the impression that this bivalve relied only on symbiont nutrition.In natural habitats, chemoautotrophic bivalves live at the interface between an anoxic sulfide-generating zone and water column oxygenated sediment. However, even if they are not close to a vent, these symbiotic organisms often have to deal with environments that are periodically depleted of oxygen (5, 12) and with extremely low sulfide concentration (13, 15, 16). These natural environmental variations lead to annual and seasonal changes in the δ-13C ratio, as observed for some thyasirid species (13, 14). This δ-13C ratio variation may be assumed to correspond to the capability of the host to rely on both autotrophic and heterotrophic pathways, and the preponderance of one pathway versus the other in the mixotrophic diet has been considered to be the way in which these organisms deal with changes in the chemical composition of their environment.Apart from the decrease in symbiont abundance suggested by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) analysis and a decrease in sulfur and protein content in the gill tissue of thyasirids (20, 38, 40), little is known about the physiological status of these symbionts and the changes undergone by the symbiotic population of starved bivalves. A previous study of the population was carried out under natural conditions with Codakia orbicularis, a chemoautotrophic bivalve. This tropical bivalve lives in shallow-water sediment among the roots of seagrasses (Thalassia testudinum) (1). Like all lucinids studied so far, it is associated with sulfur-oxidizing symbionts (4, 27, 28) containing elemental sulfur in their cytoplasm (42). The bacterial symbiont of C. orbicularis, environmentally transmitted to the host (31), belongs to a single taxonomic group (Gammaproteobacteria) (25) and is shared by several other tropical lucinids (24, 25, 34, 35). Only a few data are available on the physiology of this symbiont. It was characterized by the presence of Rubisco and ATP sulfurylase enzymes and a δ-13C ratio typical of chemoautotrophic bivalves (4). Unlike other related thyasirids tested for nitrate respiration even under oxygenated conditions (37), the symbionts of C. orbicularis use oxygen as the primary electron acceptor (23). Initial investigations of the population of Codakia orbicularis'' symbiont revealed that the symbiotic population hosted by freshly collected individuals contained a high proportion of large bacterial cells containing multiple copies of their genome, typical of actively growing cells, despite the absence of dividing cells (11). It was assumed that the host could maintain a pure culture of the symbiont inside the bacteriocytes by regulating the entry and growth of newly recruited symbionts from sediment and probably regulating symbiont densities by host digestion (11).This study was undertaken to investigate the dynamics of the symbiotic population hosted by C. orbicularis under experimental conditions based on long-term starvation of bivalves, i.e., incubated without planktonic food. We set out the ultrastructural, structural, and physiological changes that occurred in the symbiont population by examining the host gill sections using TEM and fluorescence in situ hybridization and catalyzed reporter deposition (CARD-FISH). A purified fraction of gill endosymbionts was analyzed by flow cytometry (FCM) to investigate the nucleic acid content and cell size of symbionts and by using the 5-cyano-2,3-ditolyl tetrazolium chloride (CTC) method and epifluorescence microscopy to detect the respiratory activity of symbionts. The modifications induced by host starvation in the symbiotic population are described for the period of long-term starvation.  相似文献   
125.
Genetic robustness is defined as the constancy of a phenotype in the face of deleterious mutations. Overexpression of chaperones, to assist the folding of proteins carrying deleterious mutations, is so far one of the most accepted molecular mechanisms enhancing genetic robustness. Most theories on the evolution of robustness have focused on the implications of high mutation rate. Here we show that genetic drift, which is modulated by population size, organism complexity, and epistasis, can be a sufficient force to select for chaperone-mediated genetic robustness. Using an exact analytical solution, we also show that selection for costly genetic robustness leads to a paradox: the decrease of population fitness on long timescales and the long-term dependency on robustness mechanisms. We suggest that selection for genetic robustness could be universal and not restricted to high mutation rate organisms such as RNA viruses. The evolution of the endosymbiont Buchnera illustrates this selection mechanism and its paradox: the increased dependency on chaperones mediating genetic robustness. Our model explains why most chaperones might have become essential even in optimal growth conditions.MUTATIONAL (or genetic) robustness is defined as the constancy of a phenotype in the face of deleterious mutations (Sanjuan et al. 2007). Selection drives populations to adapt to their environment by the fixation of successive advantageous mutations. However, in approaching a fitness optimum—i.e., a genotype that is maximally adapted—they have to cope with an increasing proportion of deleterious mutations and, when at the optimum, they experience only neutral and deleterious mutations (Silander et al. 2007). Therefore any mechanism that would reduce the effect of deleterious mutations, i.e., increase mutational robustness, could be favored by natural selection when at, or near, an optimum of fitness. Indeed, the general observation that for a large range of organisms, mutations have little effect on fitness, suggests that selection for robustness is pervasive (Melton 1994; Winzeler et al. 1999). Three main mechanisms that are not mutually exclusive could explain how genetic robustness has arisen. First, in the “intrinsic hypothesis” (de Visser et al. 2003) robustness could simply be a by-product of some biologically relevant functions. Second, mutational robustness could be a by-product of the selection for nongenetic perturbations such as environment changes or intrinsic noise (Wagner 2005). Third, mutational robustness could be selected for because it is adaptive in itself. In the following we restrict our attention to this “adaptive hypothesis” (de Visser et al. 2003).Chaperone proteins, proteins that help other proteins to fold properly, have been shown to buffer the effect of deleterious mutations in diverse organisms (Rutherford 2003). In lineages that have accumulated deleterious mutations, the overexpression of the chaperone GroESL in Escherichia coli (Fares et al. 2002) or Salmonella typhymurium (Maisnier-Patin et al. 2005) resulted in an improved fitness. However, such robustness appears to come at a cost, as the buffering was visible only in carbon-rich media (Fares et al. 2002), and it is also known that GroESL-mediated refolding of proteins is ATP dependent. Chaperones can also buffer against environmental perturbations (such as heat shock); however, the observation that groESL evolved under positive selection and is overproduced in obligate intracellular endosymbionts (Moran 1996; Fares et al. 2004), for which environmental perturbations are assumed to be very weak, suggests that genetic robustness could be the direct target of selection.Selection for a modifier of genetic robustness, i.e., a gene modulating the effect of mutations, has been mainly studied in the context of high mutation rates, as the effect of the modifier allele affects the fitness of mutants (Wagner 2005). Under some theoretical frameworks, it has been suggested that the intensity of selection acting on a modifier of robustness would be of the order of the mutation rate (Gardner and Kalinka 2006). Therefore it has been presumed that selection for genetic robustness is relevant only in very large populations having a high mutation rate, such as RNA virus populations. In agreement with these ideas, artificial life experiments (Wilke and Adami 2001; Azevedo et al. 2006) and experimental data on viruses (Montville et al. 2005; Sanjuan et al. 2007) have shown that robustness varies between organisms and that it can be selected for under high mutation rates. It has also been shown by Krakauer and Plotkin (2002) that drift, i.e., stochastic effects due to the finite size of populations, can promote selection for robustness even when more robust alleles are costly, as suggested in the case of chaperone overexpression. However, again this effect was examined only under high mutation rates.When mutations are very rare, populations experience at the most the presence of a single mutant. In such conditions, the population fitness at equilibrium does not depend on the mutation rate but only on drift (Sella and Hirsh 2005; Tenaillon et al. 2007). Two factors modulate how drift affects fitness:
  1. Epistasis, defined here as a local property of the adaptive landscape, describes how the selective effects of mutations depend on the genetic background in which they arise. Epistasis is negative (positive) if two mutations have a lower (higher) fitness when simultaneously present within a genome than expected if they did not interact. Negative epistasis increases selection against mutation-loaded individuals and therefore reduces the effect of drift on population fitness (Charlesworth 1990; Tenaillon et al. 2007).
  2. Phenotypic complexity, defined as the number of independent mutable traits that contribute to fitness (Orr 2000; Tenaillon et al. 2007), also affects population fitness in finite populations: complex organisms are more sensitive to the action of drift (Hartl and Taubes 1998; Poon and Otto 2000; Tenaillon et al. 2007).
In this article, we attempt to further clarify the role of drift on the evolution of chaperone-like genetic robustness and to decouple the effect of drift from the effect of the mutation rate. We use Fisher''s geometric model of adaptation (Fisher 1930), to map phenotype to fitness under an assumption of a vanishing mutation rate and extract exact analytical solutions for the genetic properties of the population at mutation–selection–drift equilibrium (MSDE). We examine how these genetic properties change under various population sizes and epistasis parameters and in organisms ranging in phenotypic complexity.  相似文献   
126.

Background

The stem cell factor receptor, KIT, is a target for the treatment of cancer, mastocytosis, and inflammatory diseases. Here, we characterise the in vitro and in vivo profiles of masitinib (AB1010), a novel phenylaminothiazole-type tyrosine kinase inhibitor that targets KIT.

Methodology/Principal Findings

In vitro, masitinib had greater activity and selectivity against KIT than imatinib, inhibiting recombinant human wild-type KIT with an half inhibitory concentration (IC50) of 200±40 nM and blocking stem cell factor-induced proliferation and KIT tyrosine phosphorylation with an IC50 of 150±80 nM in Ba/F3 cells expressing human or mouse wild-type KIT. Masitinib also potently inhibited recombinant PDGFR and the intracellular kinase Lyn, and to a lesser extent, fibroblast growth factor receptor 3. In contrast, masitinib demonstrated weak inhibition of ABL and c-Fms and was inactive against a variety of other tyrosine and serine/threonine kinases. This highly selective nature of masitinib suggests that it will exhibit a better safety profile than other tyrosine kinase inhibitors; indeed, masitinib-induced cardiotoxicity or genotoxicity has not been observed in animal studies. Molecular modelling and kinetic analysis suggest a different mode of binding than imatinib, and masitinib more strongly inhibited degranulation, cytokine production, and bone marrow mast cell migration than imatinib. Furthermore, masitinib potently inhibited human and murine KIT with activating mutations in the juxtamembrane domain. In vivo, masitinib blocked tumour growth in mice with subcutaneous grafts of Ba/F3 cells expressing a juxtamembrane KIT mutant.

Conclusions

Masitinib is a potent and selective tyrosine kinase inhibitor targeting KIT that is active, orally bioavailable in vivo, and has low toxicity.  相似文献   
127.
Triaminotriazine DNA helicase inhibitors with antibacterial activity   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Screening of a chemical library in a DNA helicase assay involving the Pseudomonas aeruginosa DnaB helicase provided a triaminotriazine inhibitor with good antibacterial activity but associated cytotoxicity toward mammalian cells. Synthesis of analogs provided a few inhibitors that retained antibacterial activity and demonstrated a significant reduction in cytotoxicity. The impact of serum and initial investigations toward a mode of action highlight several features of this class of compounds as antibacterials.  相似文献   
128.
We have studied lactic acid transport in the fast mouse extensor digitorum longus muscles (EDL) by intracellular and cell surface pH microelectrodes. The role of membrane-bound carbonic anhydrases (CA) of EDL in lactic acid transport was investigated by measuring lactate flux in muscles from wildtype, CAIV-, CAIX- and CAXIV-single ko, CAIV-CAXIV double ko and CAIV-CAIX-CAXIV-triple ko mice. This was complemented by immunocytochemical studies of the subcellular localization of CAIV, CAIX and CAXIV in mouse EDL. We find that CAXIV and CAIX single ko EDL exhibit markedly but not maximally reduced lactate fluxes, whereas triple ko and double ko EDL show maximal or near-maximal inhibition of CA-dependent lactate flux. Interpretation of the flux measurements in the light of the immunocytochemical results leads to the following conclusions. CAXIV, which is homogeneously distributed across the surface membrane of EDL fibers, facilitates lactic acid transport across this membrane. CAIX, which is associated only with T tubular membranes, facilitates lactic acid transport across the T tubule membrane. The removal of lactic acid from the lumen of T tubuli towards the interstitial space involves a CO2-HCO3- diffusional shuttle that is maintained cooperatively by CAIX within the T tubule and, besides CAXIV, by the CAIV, which is strategically located at the opening of the T tubules. The data suggest that about half the CA-dependent muscular lactate flux occurs across the surface membrane, while the other half occurs across the membranes of the T tubuli.  相似文献   
129.
We analyze the simultaneous evolution of emigration and settlement decisions for actively dispersing species differing in their ability to assess population density. Using an individual-based model we simulate dispersal as a multi-step (patch to patch) movement in a world consisting of habitat patches surrounded by a hostile matrix. Each such step is associated with the same mortality risk. Our simulations show that individuals following an informed strategy, where emigration (and settlement) probability depends on local population density, evolve a lower (natal) emigration propensity but disperse over significantly larger distances - i.e. postpone settlement longer - than individuals performing density-independent emigration. This holds especially when variation in environmental conditions is spatially correlated. Both effects can be traced to the informed individuals' ability to better exploit existing heterogeneity in reproductive chances. Yet, already moderate distance-dependent dispersal costs prevent the evolution of multi-step (long-distance) dispersal, irrespective of the dispersal strategy.  相似文献   
130.
Mutations in the Park2 gene, encoding the E3 ubiquitin‐ligase parkin, are responsible for a familial form of Parkinson's disease (PD). Parkin‐mediated ubiquitination is critical for the efficient elimination of depolarized dysfunctional mitochondria by autophagy (mitophagy). As damaged mitochondria are a major source of toxic reactive oxygen species within the cell, this pathway is believed to be highly relevant to the pathogenesis of PD. Little is known about how parkin‐mediated ubiquitination is regulated during mitophagy or about the nature of the ubiquitin conjugates involved. We report here that USP8/UBPY, a deubiquitinating enzyme not previously implicated in mitochondrial quality control, is critical for parkin‐mediated mitophagy. USP8 preferentially removes non‐canonical K6‐linked ubiquitin chains from parkin, a process required for the efficient recruitment of parkin to depolarized mitochondria and for their subsequent elimination by mitophagy. This work uncovers a novel role for USP8‐mediated deubiquitination of K6‐linked ubiquitin conjugates from parkin in mitochondrial quality control.  相似文献   
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