Post-traumatic osteoarthritis (PTOA) is a common disease, where the mechanical integrity of articular cartilage is compromised. PTOA can be a result of chondral defects formed due to injurious loading. One of the first changes around defects is proteoglycan depletion. Since there are no methods to restore injured cartilage fully back to its healthy state, preventing the onset and progression of the disease is advisable. However, this is problematic if the disease progression cannot be predicted. Thus, we developed an algorithm to predict proteoglycan loss of injured cartilage by decreasing the fixed charge density (FCD) concentration. We tested several mechanisms based on the local strains or stresses in the tissue for the FCD loss. By choosing the degeneration threshold suggested for inducing chondrocyte apoptosis and cartilage matrix damage, the algorithm driven by the maximum shear strain showed the most substantial FCD losses around the lesion. This is consistent with experimental findings in the literature. We also observed that by using coordinate system-independent strain measures and selecting the degeneration threshold in an ad hoc manner, all the resulting FCD distributions would appear qualitatively similar, i.e., the greatest FCD losses are found at the tissue adjacent to the lesion. The proposed strain-based FCD degeneration algorithm shows a great potential for predicting the progression of PTOA via biomechanical stimuli. This could allow identification of high-risk defects with an increased risk of PTOA progression.
While several studies have established a positive correlation between community diversity and invasion resistance, it is less clear how species interactions within resident communities shape this process. Here, we experimentally tested how antagonistic and facilitative pairwise interactions within resident model microbial communities predict invasion by the plant–pathogenic bacterium Ralstonia solanacearum. We found that facilitative resident community interactions promoted and antagonistic interactions suppressed invasions both in the lab and in the tomato plant rhizosphere. Crucially, pairwise interactions reliably explained observed invasion outcomes also in multispecies communities, and mechanistically, this was linked to direct inhibition of the invader by antagonistic communities (antibiosis), and to a lesser degree by resource competition between members of the resident community and the invader. Together, our findings suggest that the type and strength of pairwise interactions can reliably predict the outcome of invasions in more complex multispecies communities. 相似文献
The ectomycorrhizal symbiosis is a predominant tree–microbe interaction in forest ecosystems sustaining tree growth and health. Its establishment and functioning implies a long-term and intimate relationship between the soil-borne fungi and the roots of trees. Mycorrhiza-induced Small-Secreted Proteins (MiSSPs) are hypothesized as keystone symbiotic proteins, required to set up the symbiosis by modifying the host metabolism and/or building the symbiotic interfaces. L. bicolor MiSSP8 is the third most highly induced MiSSPs in symbiotic tissues and it is also expressed in fruiting bodies. The MiSSP8-RNAi knockdown mutants are strongly impaired in their mycorrhization ability with Populus, with the lack of fungal mantle and Hartig net development due to the lack of hyphal aggregation. MiSSP8 C-terminus displays a repetitive motif containing a kexin cleavage site, recognized by KEX2 in vitro. This suggests MiSSP8 protein might be cleaved into small peptides. Moreover, the MiSSP8 repetitive motif is found in other proteins predicted secreted by both saprotrophic and ectomycorrhizal fungi. Thus, our data indicate that MiSSP8 is a small-secreted protein involved at early stages of ectomycorrhizal symbiosis, likely by regulating hyphal aggregation and pseudoparenchyma formation. 相似文献
The isolation of a new type of thrombin inhibitor, called triabin, from the saliva of the hematophagous bug Triatoma pallidipennis,
has recently been described. In the in vitro platelet aggregation inhibition assay triabin has a similar potency as the thrombin
inhibitor hirudin now in phase III clinical trials. However, in another in vitro assay using a low molecular weight substrate
for thrombin, triabin does not inhibit thrombin completely even at 6 fold higher molar doses in comparison with hirudin. This
means that triabin has a novel mode of action towards thrombin making triabin into an interesting candidate as a therapeutic
agent. Recently it has been shown that a recombinant baculovirus can be efficiently used for the triabin production in insect
cells and that the yields in adherent cultures of High Five™ cells (approx. 20 mg l-1) were about 7 fold higher than in adherent
cultures of Sf9 cells (approx. 3 mg l- 1). To optimize the triabin yield from the baculovirus/insect cell expression system,
experiments were performed with suspension adapted cultures of High Five™ cells to investigate the effects of the state of
the host cell, of the multiplicity of infection, of the cell density at the time of infection and of supplementation of the
medium with nutrients and oxygen. Triabin yields of up to 200 mg l-1, as determined by an activity assay, could finally be
obtained here.
This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date. 相似文献
The Gal/GalNAc lectin of Entamoeba histolytica trophozoites plays an important role in adhesion. The distribution and final destiny of the lectin during the interaction with host cells are poorly understood. Using monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies against the lectin we studied by immunocytochemistry the in vitro and in vivo interaction of E. histolytica trophozoites with human and hamster hepatocytes. We also analyzed the presence and distribution of the lectin in a mouse model of intestinal amoebiasis. In all cases, trophozoites were highly labeled by anti-lectin antibodies. Cultured human and hamster hepatocytes in contact with, or localized at the vicinity of parasites were also labeled by anti-lectin antibodies. Most of the labeled hepatocytes showed variable degrees of cell damage. Hepatocytes distantly localized from the parasites were also stained with the anti-lectin antibodies. Immunolabeling of tissue sections from different stages of the development of experimental amoebic liver abscess in hamsters showed inflammatory foci containing lectin-labeled trophozoites, hepatocytes, and sinusoidal and inflammatory cells. Lectin-containing hepatocytes had vacuolated cytoplasm with some nuclei with a condensed appearance. Damaged intestinal epithelium also was labeled with anti-lectin antibodies in a mouse model of intestinal amoebiasis. Electron microscopy of axenically cultured trophozoites using gold-labeled monoclonal and polyclonal anti-lectin antibody showed that plasma membrane, vacuole membranes and areas of cell cytosol were labeled. Higher deposits of gold particles in plasma membrane suggestive of cell secretion were observed. Our results demonstrated that Gal/GalNAc lectin was bound and captured by different target cells, and that host cells containing the lectin showed signs of cell damage. The contribution of lectin transfer to host cells in adherence and cell injury remains to be determined. 相似文献
Tuberous sclerosis complex is a tumor suppressor gene syndrome whose manifestations can include seizures, mental retardation, and benign tumors of the brain, skin, heart, and kidneys. Hamartin and tuberin, the products of the TSC1 and TSC2 genes, respectively, form a complex and inhibit signaling by the mammalian target of rapamycin. Here, we demonstrate that endogenous hamartin is threonine-phosphorylated during nocodazole-induced G2/M arrest and during the G2/M phase of a normal cell cycle. In vitro assays showed that cyclin-dependent kinase 1 phosphorylates hamartin at three sites, one of which (Thr417) is in the hamartin-tuberin interaction domain. Tuberin interacts with phosphohamartin, and tuberin expression attenuates the phosphorylation of exogenous hamartin. Hamartin with alanine mutations in the three cyclin-dependent kinase 1 phosphorylation sites increased the inhibition of p70S6 kinase by the hamartin-tuberin complex. These findings support a model in which phosphorylation of hamartin regulates the function of the hamartin-tuberin complex during the G2/M phase of the cell cycle. 相似文献
Degranulated mast cells are present in the subendothelial space of eroded (de-endothelialized) coronary atheromas. Upon degranulation, mast cells secrete into the surrounding tissue an array of preformed and newly synthesized mediators, including proapoptotic molecules, such as chymase and TNF-alpha. In a co-culture system involving rat serosal mast cells and rat cardiac (microvascular) endothelial cells, we could show, by means of competitive RT-PCR, immunoblotting, immunocytochemistry, annexin staining, flow cytometry, and DNA-laddering, that stimulation of mast cells with ensuing degranulation rapidly (within 30 min) down-regulated the expression of both bcl-2 mRNA and protein, with subsequent induction of apoptosis in the endothelial cells. The major effect of bcl-2 down-regulation resided in the exocytosed granule remnants, a minor effect also being present in the granule remnant-free supernatant. No significant changes were observed in the expression levels of the pro-apoptotic protein, bax. The mast cell-mediated apoptotic effect was partially (70%) dependent on the presence of TNF-alpha and involved the translocation of cytochrome C from mitochondria into cytoplasm. These results are the first to show that one of the cell types present in the atherosclerotic plaques, namely the mast cell, by releasing both granule-remnant-bound and soluble TNF-alpha, may contribute to the erosion of atherosclerotic plaques by inducing apoptosis in adjacent endothelial cells. Published 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc. 相似文献