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The work was focused on the investigation of possible dependencies between the development of viral infection in plants and the presence of high heavy metal concentrations in soil. Field experiments have been conducted in order to study the development of systemic tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) infection in Lycopersicon esculentum L. cv. Miliana plants under effect of separate salts of heavy metals Cu, Zn and Pb deposited in soil. As it is shown, simultaneous effect of viral infection and heavy metals in tenfold maximum permissible concentration leads to decrease of total chlorophyll content in experiment plants mainly due to the degradation of chlorophyll a. The reduction of chlorophyll concentration under the combined influence of both stress factors was more serious comparing to the separate effect of every single factor. Plants' treatment with toxic concentrations of lead and zinc leaded to slight delay in the development of systemic TMV infection together with more than twofold increase of virus content in plants that may be an evidence of synergism between these heavy metal's and virus' effects. Contrary, copper although decreased total chlorophyll content but showed protective properties and significantly reduced amount of virus in plants.  相似文献   
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Light controls pineal melatonin production and temporally coordinates circadian rhythms of metabolism and physiology in normal and neoplastic tissues. We previously showed that peak circulating nocturnal melatonin levels were 7-fold higher after daytime spectral transmittance of white light through blue-tinted (compared with clear) rodent cages. Here, we tested the hypothesis that daytime blue-light amplification of nocturnal melatonin enhances the inhibition of metabolism, signaling activity, and growth of prostate cancer xenografts. Compared with male nude rats housed in clear cages under a 12:12-h light:dark cycle, rats in blue-tinted cages (with increased transmittance of 462–484 nm and decreased red light greater than 640 nm) evinced over 6-fold higher peak plasma melatonin levels at middark phase (time, 2400), whereas midlight-phase levels (1200) were low (less than 3 pg/mL) in both groups. Circadian rhythms of arterial plasma levels of linoleic acid, glucose, lactic acid, pO2, pCO2, insulin, leptin, and corticosterone were disrupted in rats in blue cages as compared with the corresponding entrained rhythms in clear-caged rats. After implantation with tissue-isolated PC3 human prostate cancer xenografts, tumor latency-to-onset of growth and growth rates were markedly delayed, and tumor cAMP levels, uptake–metabolism of linoleic acid, aerobic glycolysis (Warburg effect), and growth signaling activities were reduced in rats in blue compared with clear cages. These data show that the amplification of nighttime melatonin levels by exposing nude rats to blue light during the daytime significantly reduces human prostate cancer metabolic, signaling, and proliferative activities.Abbreviations: A-V, arterial–venous difference, ipRGC, intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cell, LA, linoleic acid, 13-HODE, 13-hydroxyoctadecadienoic acid, TFA, total fatty acidsLight profoundly influences circadian, neuroendocrine, and neurobehavioral regulation in all mammals and is essential to life on our planet.2,15,28, 40 The light–dark cycle entrains the master biologic clock, located in the suprachiasmatic nucleus of the brain, in an intensity-, duration-, and wavelength-dependent manner.8-13 Photobiologic responses, including circadian rhythms of metabolism and physiology, are mediated by organic molecules called ‘chromophores,’ which are contained within a small subset of retinal cells, called the intrinsically sensitive retinal ganglion cells (ipRGC).16,29,31,36,41,49,53,59 In humans and rodents light quanta are detected by the chromophore melanopsin, which detects light quanta in principally the short-wavelength, blue-appearing portion of the spectrum (446 to 477 nm), and transmits its photic information via the retinohypothalamic tract to the ‘molecular clock’ of the suprachiasmatic nucleus. This region of the brain regulates the daily pineal gland production of the circadian neurohormone melatonin (N-acetyl-5-methoxytryptamine), which results in high levels produced at night and low levels during daytime.38,54 The daily, rhythmic melatonin signal provides temporal coordination of normal behavioral and physiologic functions including chronobiologic rhythms of locomotor activity,2 sleep-wake cycle,2,14 dietary and water intake,2,51 hormone secretion and metabolism.5,44,47,61 Alterations in light intensity, duration, and spectral quality at a given time of day,8-13,17,19-22,24,61 such as occurs in night-shift workers exposed to light at night,26,34,46,57 acutely suppresses endogenous melatonin levels in most mammalian species9,11,44,45,54,55 and may lead to various disease states, including metabolic syndrome5,61 and carcinogenesis.4-7,17,18Recent studies from our laboratory5,20,23-25,60,61 have demonstrated that relatively small changes in the spectral transmittance (color) of light passing through translucent amber (>590 nm), blue (>480 nm), and red-tinted (>640 nm) polycarbonate laboratory rodent cages, compared with standard polycarbonate clear cages (390 to 700 nm), during the light phase markedly influenced the normal nighttime melatonin signal and disrupted temporal coordination of metabolism and physiology.19,24,61 Most notable was our discovery that, in both male and female pigmented nude rats maintained in blue-tinted rodent cages, nighttime melatonin levels were as much as 7 times higher than normal nighttime peak levels in animals maintained in all other cage types.19 An earlier study in human subjects diagnosed with midwinter insomnia coupled with low nighttime melatonin levels demonstrated that daily exposure to intense morning bright polychromatic light therapy for up to one week resulted in a restoration of nocturnal melatonin levels to those of control subjects.35 In another study, exposure to blue-tinted (470 nm) LED light (100 lx) for approximately 20 min in the morning after 2 sleep-restricted (6 h) nights led to earlier onset of the melatonin surge at nighttime.30In the United States alone this year, approximately 240,000 men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer, and nearly 30,000 will die from this disease (National Cancer Institute; www.cancer.gov/). Epidemiologic studies have shown that night shift work, which involves circadian disruption, including nocturnal melatonin suppression, markedly increases prostate cancer risk in men.26,34,46,57,58 Both in vitro and in vivo studies have demonstrated that melatonin inhibits human prostate cancer growth, including that of androgen-receptor–negative, castration-resistant PC3 human prostate cancer cells.20,29,42,56 Cancer cells depend primarily on aerobic glycolysis (Warburg effect) over oxidative phosphorylation to meet their bioenergetic needs supporting biomass formation.5 The Warburg effect is characterized by increased cellular uptake of glucose and production of lactate despite an abundance of oxygen. Investigations have shown that signal transduction pathways that include AKT, MEK, NFκB, GS3Kβ, and PDK1 drive the Warburg effect.5,61 In addition, cancer cells rely on increased uptake of the ω6 fatty acid linoleic acid (LA), which is prevalent in the western diet.4-6 In most cancers, LA uptake occurs through a cAMP-dependent transport mechanism, and LA is metabolized to the mitogenic agent 13-hydroxyoctadecadienoic acid (13-HODE). In most tumors, 13-HODE plays an important role in enhancing downstream phosphorylation of ERK 1/2, AKT, and activation of the Warburg effect, thereby leading to increased cell proliferation and tumor growth.4-6 Melatonin, the principal neurohormone of the pineal gland and whose production is regulated by the suprachiasmatic nucleus,4,5 modulates processes of tumor initiation, progression, and growth in vivo.5 The circadian nocturnal melatonin signal not only inhibits LA uptake and metabolism, the Warburg effect in human cancer xenografts, and ultimately tumor growth, but it actually drives circadian rhythms in tumor metabolism, signal transduction activity, and cell proliferation. These effects are extinguished when melatonin production is suppressed by light exposure at night.5In the present investigation, we examined the hypothesis that the spectral transmittance (color) of short-wavelength (480 nm) bright light passing through blue-tinted standard laboratory rodent cages during the light phase not only amplifies the normal circadian nocturnal melatonin signal but also enhances the inhibition of the metabolism, signaling activity, and growth progression of human PC3 androgen-receptor–negative human prostate cancer xenografts in male nude rats.  相似文献   
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Backgroud  

Extramedullary hematopoiesis (EMH) is defined as the presence of hematopoietic stem cells such as erythroid and myeloid lineage plus megakaryocytes in extramedullary sites like liver, spleen and lymph nodes and is usually associated with either bone marrow or hematological disorders. Mammary EMH is a rare condition either in human and veterinary medicine and can be associated with benign mixed mammary tumors, similarly to that described in this case.  相似文献   
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Belancio VP  Whelton M  Deininger P 《Gene》2007,390(1-2):98-107
LINE-1 (L1) is the only active, autonomous, non-LTR, human retroelement. There are about 5 × 105 L1 copies in the human genome, the majority of which are truncated at their 5′ ends. Both truncated and full-length L1 insertions contain a polyadenylation (polyA) signal at their 3′ ends. A typical polyA site consists of the three main cis-acting elements: a conserved hexamer, cleavage site, and a GU-rich downstream region. A newly inserted L1 copy contains the conserved AATAAA hexamer at the end of its sequence. However, the GU-rich downstream region has to be provided by the neighboring genomic sequences and therefore it would vary for every L1 copy. Using northern blot analysis of transiently transfected L1 expression vectors we demonstrate that L1 element contain sequence that allow efficient polyadenylation at the L1 3′ end upon retrotransposition into a new genomic location independent of the base composition downstream of the insertion site. The strategy of polyadenylation at the 3′ end of L1 parallels the approach the element employs at its 5′UTR by having an unusual internal polymerase II promoter, making new insertions less dependent on the properties of the flanking sequences at the new locus.  相似文献   
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The central circadian clock within the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) plays an important role in temporally organizing and coordinating many of the processes governing cancer cell proliferation and tumor growth in synchrony with the daily light/dark cycle which may contribute to endogenous cancer prevention. Bioenergetic substrates and molecular intermediates required for building tumor biomass each day are derived from both aerobic glycolysis (Warburg effect) and lipid metabolism. Using tissue-isolated human breast cancer xenografts grown in nude rats, we determined that circulating systemic factors in the host and the Warburg effect, linoleic acid uptake/metabolism and growth signaling activities in the tumor are dynamically regulated, coordinated and integrated within circadian time structure over a 24-hour light/dark cycle by SCN-driven nocturnal pineal production of the anticancer hormone melatonin. Dim light at night (LAN)-induced melatonin suppression disrupts this circadian-regulated host/cancer balance among several important cancer preventative signaling mechanisms, leading to hyperglycemia and hyperinsulinemia in the host and runaway aerobic glycolysis, lipid signaling and proliferative activity in the tumor.  相似文献   
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Expression of long interspersed element-1 (L1) is upregulated in many human malignancies. L1 can introduce genomic instability via insertional mutagenesis and DNA double-strand breaks, both of which may promote cancer. Light exposure at night, a recently recognized carcinogen, is associated with an increased risk of cancer in shift workers. We report that melatonin receptor 1 inhibits mobilization of L1 in cultured cells through downregulation of L1 mRNA and ORF1 protein. The addition of melatonin receptor antagonists abolishes the MT1 effect on retrotransposition in a dose-dependent manner. Furthermore, melatonin-rich, but not melatonin-poor, human blood collected at different times during the circadian cycle suppresses endogenous L1 mRNA during in situ perfusion of tissue-isolated xenografts of human cancer. Supplementation of human blood with exogenous melatonin or melatonin receptor antagonist during the in situ perfusion establishes a receptor-mediated action of melatonin on L1 expression. Combined tissue culture and in vivo data support that environmental light exposure of the host regulates expression of L1 elements in tumors. Our data imply that light-induced suppression of melatonin production in shift workers may increase L1-induced genomic instability in their genomes and suggest a possible connection between L1 activity and increased incidence of cancer associated with circadian disruption.  相似文献   
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