Search results for " Enhancement"

showing 10 items of 521 documents

Downregulation of RhoB GTPase confers resistance to cisplatin in human larygneal carcinoma cells

2009

Acquired resistance to cisplatin represents a major obstacle to an efficient chemotherapy. We found downregulation of RhoB expression in cisplatin-resistant tumor cell lines from different origin. In cisplatin-resistant laryngeal carcinoma subline overexpression of farnesylated or geranylgeranylated RhoB increased cisplatin-induced cell death, while silencing of RhoB expression diminished sensitivity of parental HEp-2 cells via decreased cellular accumulation of cisplatin. However, since RhoB silencing in additional tumor cell lines did not alter their sensitivity to cisplatin, we can assume that RhoB downregulation does not provide general protective role in cell response to cisplatin. Nev…

Cancer ResearchProgrammed cell deathGenetic enhancementRHOBmedicine.medical_treatmentDown-RegulationAntineoplastic AgentsBiologyDownregulation and upregulationCell Line TumormedicineCarcinomaHumansGene silencingrhoB GTP-Binding ProteinLaryngeal NeoplasmsCisplatinChemotherapymedicine.diseaseCell biologyOncologyDrug Resistance NeoplasmCancer researchcisplatin ; drug resistance ; Rho GTPases ; RhoBCisplatinmedicine.drug
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Aav-based gene therapy approaches for the treatment of canavan disease

2013

Background: The enzyme Aspartoacylase (ASPA) is normally expressed in oligodendrocytes, the myelin-forming cells in the central nervous system (CNS). ASPA gene mutations cause Canavan Disease (CD), a devastating neurological disorder characterized by psychomotor retardation, and spongiform degeneration of central white matter in affected children. The lack of ASPA leads to the enrichment in its substrate N-acetyl aspartate (NAA) which is a biomarker of CD. With no available treatment and a pathology restricted to the CNS CD has been trialled by gene therapy. However, gene replacement approaches using neurotropic recombinant adeno-associated viral (rAAV) vectors have proved unsuccessful. It …

Cancer ResearchTransplantationbiologyTransgeneGenetic enhancementImmunologyCell BiologyGene mutationmedicine.diseaseMolecular biologyCanavan diseaseAspartoacylaseMyelin basic proteinMyelinmedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemOncologymedicinebiology.proteinImmunology and AllergyVector (molecular biology)Genetics (clinical)Cytotherapy
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Going beyond histology. Synchrotron micro-computed tomography as a methodology for biological tissue characterization: from tissue morphology to indi…

2009

Current light microscopic methods such as serial sectioning, confocal microscopy or multiphoton microscopy are severely limited in their ability to analyse rather opaque biological structures in three dimensions, while electron optical methods offer either a good three-dimensional topographic visualization (scanning electron microscopy) or high-resolution imaging of very thin samples (transmission electron microscopy). However, sample preparation commonly results in a significant alteration and the destruction of the three-dimensional integrity of the specimen. Depending on the selected photon energy, the interaction between X-rays and biological matter provides semi-transparency of the spe…

Cartilage Articularthree-dimensional imagingMaterials scienceOpacityScanning electron microscope1004Biomedical EngineeringBiophysicsAnalytical chemistryBioengineeringPhoton energyIn Vitro TechniquesBiochemistrysynchrotron micro-computed tomographylaw.inventionBiomaterialshistologyChondrocyteslawConfocal microscopyResearch articlesAnimalscartilageCells CulturedTomographic reconstruction30HistologySynchrotron124Radiographic Image EnhancementTransmission electron microscopychondrocyteCattleTomography X-Ray ComputedSynchrotronsscanning electron microscopyBiotechnologyBiomedical engineeringJournal of the Royal Society, Interface
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A Thermophilic Tetramolecular G-Quadruplex/Hemin DNAzyme.

2017

International audience; The quadruplex-based DNAzyme system is one of the most useful artificial enzymes or catalysts; their unique properties make them reliable alternatives to proteins for performing catalytic transformation. The first prototype of a thermally stable DNAzyme system is presented. This thermophilic DNAzyme is capable of oxidizing substrates at high temperatures (up to 95 degrees C) and long reaction times (up to 18 h at 75 degrees C). The catalytic activity of the DNAzymes were investigated with the standard peroxidase-mimicking oxidation of 2,2'-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzothiozoline-6-sulfonic acid) (ABTS) by H2O2. The step-by-step design of this unique heat-activated G-quadrup…

Catalytic transformationDNAzymeoxidationDeoxyribozymeaptamersspecificityNanotechnologyBiocompatible MaterialsdnainsightsG-quadruplex010402 general chemistry[ CHIM ] Chemical Sciences01 natural sciencesperoxidase-mimicking dnazymesCatalysisCatalysischemistry.chemical_compoundOxidizing agent[CHIM]Chemical SciencesBenzothiazolesthermophilicityComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSPeroxidaseChemistry010405 organic chemistryThermophileperoxidase activityGeneral Chemistry[CHIM.CATA]Chemical Sciences/CatalysisGeneral MedicineDNA CatalyticHydrogen PeroxideCombinatorial chemistry0104 chemical sciencesG-QuadruplexesMethylene BluekineticsHeminactivity enhancementSulfonic AcidsporphyrinOxidation-ReductioncomplexHeminAngewandte Chemie (International ed. in English)
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Strong Emission Enhancement in pH-Responsive 2:2 Cucurbit[8]uril Complexes

2019

Organic fluorophores, particularly stimuli-responsive molecules, are very interesting for biological and material sciences applications, but frequently limited by aggregation- and rotation-caused photoluminescence quenching. A series of easily accessible bipyridinium fluorophores, whose emission is quenched by a twisted intramolecular charge-transfer (TICT) mechanism, is reported. Encapsulation in a cucurbit[7]uril host gave a 1:1 complex exhibiting a moderate emission increase due to destabilization of the TICT state inside the apolar cucurbituril cavity. A much stronger fluorescence enhancement is observed in 2:2 complexes with the larger cucurbit[8]uril, which is caused by additional con…

Charge transferLuminescenceintramolecular motioncucurbiturilsluminesenssihost–guest systemsfluoresenssisupramolekulaarinen kemiafluorescence enhancementBiological materialsFluorophores
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Plasmonic Resonant Nanoantennas Induce Changes in the Shape and the Intensity of Infrared Spectra of Phospholipids.

2021

Surface enhanced infrared absorption spectroscopic studies (SEIRAS) as a technique to study biological molecules in extremely low concentrations is greatly evolving. In order to use the technique for identification of the structure and interactions of such biological molecules, it is necessary to identify the effects of the plasmonic electric-field enhancement on the spectral signature. In this study the spectral properties of 1,2-Dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3 phosphothioethanol (DPPTE) phospholipid immobilized on gold nanoantennas, specifically designed to enhance the vibrational fingerprints of lipid molecules were studied. An AFM study demonstrates an organization of the DPPTE phospholipid in…

Chemical PhenomenaSpectrophotometry InfraredLipid BilayersPharmaceutical ScienceMetal NanoparticleslipiditMicroscopy Atomic ForcebiomolekyylitkultaArticleAnalytical ChemistryQD241-441nanorakenteetDrug Discoveryddc:530Physical and Theoretical ChemistryDPPTEenhancementPhospholipidsSEIRASnanoantennas; DPPTE; bilayers; SEIRAS; enhancement; AFMPhysicsOrganic ChemistryTemperatureinfrapunaspektroskopiaSurface Plasmon ResonanceNanostructuresnanoantennasChemistry (miscellaneous)Molecular MedicineGoldAFMbilayersMolecules (Basel, Switzerland)
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Automatic detection of large dense-core vesicles in secretory cells and statistical analysis of their intracellular distribution.

2010

Analyzing the morphological appearance and the spatial distribution of large dense-core vesicles (granules) in the cell cytoplasm is central to the understanding of regulated exocytosis. This paper is concerned with the automatic detection of granules and the statistical analysis of their spatial locations in different cell groups. We model the locations of granules of a given cell as a realization of a finite spatial point process and the point patterns associated with the cell groups as replicated point patterns of different spatial point processes. First, an algorithm to segment the granules using electron microscopy images is proposed. Second, the relative locations of the granules with…

Chromaffin CellsInformation Storage and RetrievalBiologyBioinformaticsModels BiologicalSensitivity and SpecificityPoint processExocytosislaw.inventionPattern Recognition AutomatedMicelawArtificial IntelligenceImage Interpretation Computer-AssistedGeneticsAnimalsSecretionChromaffin GranulesComputer SimulationCells CulturedModels StatisticalApplied MathematicsVesicleSecretory VesiclesReproducibility of ResultsImage EnhancementEmpirical distribution functionMicroscopy ElectronAnimals NewbornCytoplasmData Interpretation StatisticalElectron microscopeBiological systemIntracellularAlgorithmsBiotechnologyIEEE/ACM transactions on computational biology and bioinformatics
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Comparison of Nonclassic and Classic Phenotype of Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Focused on Prognostic Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Parameters: A Single-C…

2022

Patients with nonclassic phenotypes (NCP)—more advanced stages of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM)—constitute an intriguing and heterogeneous group that is difficult to diagnose, risk-stratify, and treat, and often neglected in research projects. We aimed to compare cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) parameters in NCP versus classic phenotypes (CP) of HCM with special emphasis given to the parameters of established and potential prognostic importance, including numerous variables not used in everyday clinical practice. The CMR studies of 88 patients performed from 2011 to 2019 were postprocessed according to the study protocol to obtain standard and non-standard parameters. In NCP, the late …

Clinical Biochemistrycardiovascular systemcardiovascular diseasesmagnetic resonance imaging; late gadolinium enhancement; hypertrophic cardiomyopathy; phenotype; sudden cardiac death; new imaging techniques; prognosis; outcomes; functional imaging; left ventricular obstruction; left atrium; mitral valve apparatusDiagnostics
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Expressive suppression and enhancement during music-elicited emotions in younger and older adults

2015

International audience; When presented with emotional visual scenes, older adults have been found to be equally capable to regulate emotion expression as younger adults, corroborating the view that emotion regulation skills are maintained or even improved in later adulthood. However, the possibility that gaze direction might help achieve an emotion control goal has not been taken into account, raising the question whether the effortful processing of expressive regulation is really spared from the general age-related decline. Since it does not allow perceptual attention to be redirected away from the emotional source, music provides a useful way to address this question. In the present study…

Cognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subject050109 social psychologymusical emotions[ SCCO.PSYC ] Cognitive science/Psychology050105 experimental psychologylcsh:RC321-571Developmental psychologyPerception0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesEmotional expressionexpressive enhancementOriginal Research ArticleControl (linguistics)Expressive SuppressionReactivity (psychology)lcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatrymedia_commonphysiological measuresexpressive suppression05 social sciencesagingGazeExpression (architecture)Younger adults[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/PsychologyPsychologyNeuroscience
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Efficient gene delivery to the inflamed colon by local administration of recombinant adenoviruses with normal or modified fibre structure

1999

BACKGROUND/AIMSReplication deficient recombinant adenoviruses represent an efficient means of transferring genes in vivo into a wide variety of dividing and quiescent cells from many different organs. Although the gastrointestinal tract is a potentially attractive target for gene therapy approaches, only a few studies on the use of viral gene transfer vehicles in the gut have been reported. The prospects of using recombinant adenoviruses for gene delivery into epithelial and subepithelial cells of the normal and inflamed colon are here analysed.METHODSAn E1/E3 deleted recombinant adenovirus (denoted AdCMVβGal) and an adenovirus with modified fibre structure (denoted AdZ.F(pk7)) both express…

ColonT cellGenetic enhancementGenetic VectorsGene ExpressionBiologyGene deliverymedicine.disease_causeRecombinant virusArticleAdenoviridaeMiceAdministration RectalGene expressionmedicineAnimalsHumansReporter geneLamina propriaMice Inbred BALB CGastroenterologyGene Transfer TechniquesDefective VirusesColitisInflammatory Bowel Diseasesbeta-GalactosidaseVirologyMolecular biologyAdenoviridaemedicine.anatomical_structureInjections IntravenousInjections Intraperitoneal
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