Search results for " Models"

showing 10 items of 4240 documents

An Intronic cis-Regulatory Element Is Crucial for the Alpha Tubulin Pl-Tuba1a Gene Activation in the Ciliary Band and Animal Pole Neurogenic Domains …

2017

In sea urchin development, structures derived from neurogenic territory control the swimming and feeding responses of the pluteus as well as the process of metamorphosis. We have previously isolated an alpha tubulin family member of Paracentrotus lividus (Pl-Tuba1a, formerly known as Pl-Talpha2) that is specifically expressed in the ciliary band and animal pole neurogenic domains of the sea urchin embryo. In order to identify cis-regulatory elements controlling its spatio-temporal expression, we conducted gene transfer experiments, transgene deletions and site specific mutagenesis. Thus, a genomic region of about 2.6 Kb of Pl-Tuba1a, containing four Interspecifically Conserved Regions (ICRs…

0301 basic medicineEmbryologyPolarity in embryogenesislcsh:MedicineGene ExpressionMedicine (all); Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology (all); Agricultural and Biological Sciences (all)medicine.disease_causeBiochemistryTubulinGene expressionElectron MicroscopyTransgeneslcsh:SciencePromoter Regions GeneticSea urchinConserved SequenceSequence DeletionGeneticsRegulation of gene expressionMicroscopyMutationMultidisciplinaryMedicine (all)Gene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalGenomicsAnimal ModelsTATA BoxEnzymesEnhancer Elements GeneticExperimental Organism Systemsembryonic structuresParacentrotusTranscription Initiation SiteOxidoreductasesLuciferaseResearch ArticleEchinodermsTranscriptional ActivationImaging TechniquesNeurogenesisGreen Fluorescent ProteinsEmbryonic DevelopmentSettore BIO/11 - Biologia MolecolareBiologyResearch and Analysis MethodsGenome ComplexityParacentrotus lividus03 medical and health sciencesSpecies SpecificityTubulinsbiology.animalFluorescence ImagingGeneticsmedicineConsensus sequenceAnimalsCiliaEnhancerBiochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology (all)Binding SitesModels Geneticlcsh:REmbryosOrganismsBiology and Life SciencesComputational BiologyProteinsbiology.organism_classificationInvertebratesIntronsCytoskeletal Proteins030104 developmental biologyAgricultural and Biological Sciences (all)Bright Field ImagingSea UrchinsEnzymologyMutagenesis Site-Directedlcsh:QTransmission Electron MicroscopyDevelopmental BiologyTranscription FactorsPLOS ONE
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The more the merrier? Scoring, statistics and animal welfare in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis.

2016

Experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) is a frequently used animal model for the investigation of autoimmune processes in the central nervous system. As such, EAE is useful for modelling certain aspects of multiple sclerosis, a human autoimmune disease that leads to demyelination and axonal destruction. It is an important tool for investigating pathobiology, identifying drug targets and testing drug candidates. Even though EAE is routinely used in many laboratories and is often part of the routine assessment of knockouts and transgenes, scoring of the disease course has not become standardized in the community, with at least 83 published scoring variants. Varying scales with diffe…

0301 basic medicineEncephalomyelitis Autoimmune Experimental3400 General Veterinary610 Medicine & healthAnimal WelfareDisease course03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineAnimal modelAnimals LaboratorymedicineAnimalsStatistical analysis10239 Institute of Laboratory Animal SciencerefinementAutoimmune diseasescoring scalesGeneral VeterinaryAnimal Welfare (journal)business.industryEAEMultiple sclerosisExperimental autoimmune encephalomyelitismedicine.diseasehumane endpointsDisease Models Animal030104 developmental biologyResearch DesignAnimals Domestic570 Life sciences; biologyAnimal Science and Zoology1103 Animal Science and ZoologybusinessNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryLaboratory animals
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EBI2 – Sensor for dihydroxycholesterol gradients in neuroinflammation

2018

Dihydroxycholesterols such as 7α,25-dihydroxysterols (7α,25-OHC) and 7α,27-OHC are generated from cholesterol by the enzymes CH25H, CYP7B1 and CYP27A1 in steady state but also in the context of inflammation. The G-protein coupled receptor (GPCR) Epstein-Barr virus-induced gene 2 (EBI2), also known as GPR183, senses these oxysterols and induces chemotactic migration of immune cells towards higher concentrations of these ligands. We recently showed that these ligands are upregulated in the CNS in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), an animal model for multiple sclerosis and that EBI2 enhanced early infiltration of encephalitogenic T cells into the CNS. In this short-review we dis…

0301 basic medicineEncephalomyelitis Autoimmune ExperimentalMultiple SclerosisInflammationContext (language use)BiochemistryReceptors G-Protein-Coupled03 medical and health sciencesImmune systemmedicineAnimalsHumansReceptorNeuroinflammationInflammationImmunity CellularChemistryChemotaxisExperimental autoimmune encephalomyelitisGPR183ChemotaxisGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseHydroxycholesterolsCell biologyDisease Models Animal030104 developmental biologymedicine.symptomBiochimie
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T cells mediate autoantibody-induced cutaneous inflammation and blistering in epidermolysis bullosa acquisita

2016

AbstractT cells are key players in autoimmune diseases by supporting the production of autoantibodies. However, their contribution to the effector phase of antibody-mediated autoimmune dermatoses, i.e., tissue injury and inflammation of the skin, has not been investigated. In this paper, we demonstrate that T cells amplify the development of autoantibody-induced tissue injury in a prototypical, organ-specific autoimmune disease, namely epidermolysis bullosa acquisita (EBA) – characterized and caused by autoantibodies targeting type VII collagen. Specifically, we show that immune complex (IC)-induced inflammation depends on the presence of T cells – a process facilitated by T cell receptor (…

0301 basic medicineEpidermolysis bullosa acquisitamedicine.medical_specialtyCollagen Type VIINeutrophilsT-LymphocytesGene ExpressionMice NudeInflammationAntigen-Antibody ComplexCell CommunicationEpidermolysis Bullosa AcquisitaArticleMice03 medical and health sciencesCricetulus0302 clinical medicinemedicineAnimalsHumansAutoantibodiesSkinAutoimmune diseaseMice Inbred BALB CMultidisciplinarybusiness.industryT-cell receptorAutoantibodyAntibodies MonoclonalReceptors Antigen T-Cell gamma-deltamedicine.diseaseNatural killer T cellDermatologyImmune complexMice Inbred C57BLDisease Models Animal030104 developmental biologyLymphatic systemImmunoglobulin GImmunologyNatural Killer T-CellsLymph NodesRabbitsmedicine.symptombusinessSpleenSignal Transduction030215 immunologyScientific Reports
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Diversification of spatiotemporal expression and copy number variation of the echinoid hbox12/pmar1/micro1 multigene family

2017

Changes occurring during evolution in the cis-regulatory landscapes of individual members of multigene families might impart diversification in their spatiotemporal expression and function. The archetypal member of the echinoid hbox12/pmar1/micro1 family is hbox12-a, a homeobox-containing gene expressed exclusively by dorsal blastomeres, where it governs the dorsal/ventral gene regulatory network during embryogenesis of the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus. Here we describe the inventory of the hbox12/pmar1/micro1 genes in P. lividus, highlighting that gene copy number variation occurs across individual sea urchins of the same species. We show that the various hbox12/pmar1/micro1 genes grou…

0301 basic medicineEvolutionary GeneticsEmbryologyGene regulatory networklcsh:MedicineGene ExpressionMedicine (all); Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology (all); Agricultural and Biological Sciences (all)Database and Informatics MethodsGene duplicationGene Regulatory NetworksCopy-number variationlcsh:ScienceSea urchinPhylogenyMultidisciplinarybiologyPhylogenetic treeMedicine (all)Genes HomeoboxGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalAnimal ModelsGenomicsExperimental Organism SystemsMultigene FamilySequence AnalysisResearch ArticleEchinodermsDNA Copy Number VariationsBioinformaticsDNA transcriptionZoologySettore BIO/11 - Biologia MolecolareResearch and Analysis MethodsParacentrotus lividus03 medical and health sciencesSequence Motif Analysisbiology.animalGeneticsGene familyAnimalsGeneEvolutionary BiologyBiochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology (all)lcsh:REmbryosOrganismsBiology and Life SciencesComputational Biologybiology.organism_classificationGenome AnalysisGenomic LibrariesInvertebrates030104 developmental biologyAgricultural and Biological Sciences (all)Evolutionary biologySea Urchinslcsh:QSequence AlignmentDevelopmental Biology
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Externalized decondensed neutrophil chromatin occludes pancreatic ducts and drives pancreatitis

2016

Ductal occlusion has been postulated to precipitate focal pancreatic inflammation, while the nature of the primary occluding agents has remained elusive. Neutrophils make use of histone citrullination by peptidyl arginine deiminase-4 (PADI4) in contact to particulate agents to extrude decondensed chromatin as neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs). In high cellular density, NETs form macroscopically visible aggregates. Here we show that such aggregates form inside pancreatic ducts in humans and mice occluding pancreatic ducts and thereby driving pancreatic inflammation. Experimental models indicate that PADI4 is critical for intraductal aggregate formation and that PADI4-deficiency abrogates…

0301 basic medicineExtracellular TrapsHydrolasesNeutrophilsScienceGeneral Physics and AstronomyBiologyExtracellular TrapsArticleGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyMice03 medical and health sciencesPancreatic JuiceProtein-Arginine Deiminase Type 4medicineAnimalsHumansPancreasCeruletideMultidisciplinaryReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionQInterleukin-17Pancreatic DuctsGeneral ChemistryNeutrophil extracellular trapsFlow Cytometrymedicine.diseaseImmunohistochemistryChromatinCell biologyChromatinDisease Models AnimalHistone citrullination030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structurePancreatitisChronic DiseasePancreatic juiceImmunologyProtein-Arginine DeiminasesCytokinesPancreatitisPancreasCeruletideNature Communications
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Low-energy extracorporeal shockwave therapy (ESWT) improves metaphyseal fracture healing in an osteoporotic rat model.

2017

Purpose As result of the current demographic changes, osteoporosis and osteoporotic fractures are becoming an increasing social and economic burden. In this experimental study, extracorporeal shock wave therapy (ESWT), was evaluated as a treatment option for the improvement of osteoporotic fracture healing. Methods A well-established fracture model in the metaphyseal tibia in the osteoporotic rat was used. 132 animals were divided into 11 groups, with 12 animals each, consisting of one sham-operated group and 10 ovariectomized (osteoporotic) groups, of which 9 received ESWT treatment. Different energy flux intensities (0.15 mJ/mm2, 0.35 mJ/mm2, or 0.55 mJ/mm2) as well as different numbers o…

0301 basic medicineExtracorporeal Shockwave TherapyCritical Care and Emergency Medicinemedicine.medical_treatmentOsteoporosisTest StatisticsDentistryGene Expressionlcsh:MedicineRats Sprague-Dawley0302 clinical medicineMathematical and Statistical TechniquesAnimal CellsMedicine and Health SciencesReproductive System ProceduresConnective Tissue Diseaseslcsh:ScienceMusculoskeletal SystemTrauma MedicineConnective Tissue CellsFracture Healing030222 orthopedicsMultidisciplinaryBiomechanicsBone FractureConnective TissueExtracorporeal shockwave therapyPhysical SciencesOvariectomized ratFemaleAnatomyCellular TypesTraumatic InjuryStatistics (Mathematics)Research ArticleOvariectomySurgical and Invasive Medical ProceduresBone healingResearch and Analysis Methods03 medical and health sciencesRheumatologymedicineGeneticsAnimalsTibiaStatistical MethodsSkeletonAnalysis of VarianceOsteoblastsSurgical ExcisionTibiabusiness.industrylcsh:RBiology and Life SciencesBone fractureCell Biologymedicine.diseaseRatsDisease Models Animal030104 developmental biologyBiological TissueAdjunctive treatmentOsteoporosislcsh:QbusinessOsteoporotic FracturesMathematicsPLoS ONE
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Non-primate lentiviral vectors and their applications in gene therapy for ocular disorders

2018

Lentiviruses have a number of molecular features in common, starting with the ability to integrate their genetic material into the genome of non-dividing infected cells. A peculiar property of non-primate lentiviruses consists in their incapability to infect and induce diseases in humans, thus providing the main rationale for deriving biologically safe lentiviral vectors for gene therapy applications. In this review, we first give an overview of non-primate lentiviruses, highlighting their common and distinctive molecular characteristics together with key concepts in the molecular biology of lentiviruses. We next examine the bioengineering strategies leading to the conversion of lentiviruse…

0301 basic medicineEye DiseasesGenetic enhancementGenetic Vectorslcsh:QR1-502Settore BIO/11 - Biologia MolecolareReviewComputational biologyGenomelcsh:MicrobiologyLentiviruViral vectorEIAV03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineGene therapyVirologyJDVAnimalsHumansZebrafishDrug CarrierZebrafishDrug CarriersBIVbiologyAnimalLentivirusCAEVEye DiseaseGenetic Therapybiology.organism_classificationFIVOphthalmologyDisease Models Animal030104 developmental biologyInfectious DiseasesVMVLentiviral vector030217 neurology & neurosurgeryHuman
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Integrative analysis of structural variations using short-reads and linked-reads yields highly specific and sensitive predictions.

2020

Genetic diseases are driven by aberrations of the human genome. Identification of such aberrations including structural variations (SVs) is key to our understanding. Conventional short-reads whole genome sequencing (cWGS) can identify SVs to base-pair resolution, but utilizes only short-range information and suffers from high false discovery rate (FDR). Linked-reads sequencing (10XWGS) utilizes long-range information by linkage of short-reads originating from the same large DNA molecule. This can mitigate alignment-based artefacts especially in repetitive regions and should enable better prediction of SVs. However, an unbiased evaluation of this technology is not available. In this study, w…

0301 basic medicineFalse discovery rateComputer scienceArtificial Gene Amplification and ExtensionPolymerase Chain ReactionDatabase and Informatics MethodsSequencing techniques0302 clinical medicineBreast TumorsBasic Cancer ResearchMedicine and Health SciencesDNA sequencingBiology (General)EcologyHigh-Throughput Nucleotide SequencingGenomicsDNA Neoplasm3. Good healthIdentification (information)OncologyComputational Theory and MathematicsModeling and SimulationMCF-7 CellsFemaleSequence AnalysisResearch ArticleBioinformaticsQH301-705.5Breast NeoplasmsGenomicsComputational biologyResearch and Analysis MethodsHuman Genomics03 medical and health sciencesCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceCancer GenomicsGenomic MedicineBreast CancerGeneticsDNA Barcoding TaxonomicHumansMolecular Biology TechniquesMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsWhole genome sequencingLinkage (software)Whole Genome SequencingGenome HumanDideoxy DNA sequencingGenetic Diseases InbornCancers and NeoplasmsBiology and Life SciencesComputational BiologyStatistical modelSequence Analysis DNARepetitive RegionsLogistic Models030104 developmental biologyGenomic Structural VariationHuman genomeSequence Alignment030217 neurology & neurosurgeryPLoS Computational Biology
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Shikonin Prevents Early Phase Inflammation Associated with Azoxymethane/Dextran Sulfate Sodium-Induced Colon Cancer and Induces Apoptosis in Human Co…

2018

Shikonin is the main active principle in the root of Lithospermum erythrorhizon, widely used in traditional Chinese medicine for its anti-inflammatory and wound healing properties. Recent research highlights shikonin's antitumor properties and capacity to prevent acute ulcerative colitis. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the ability of shikonin to prevent, in vivo, the early phases of colorectal cancer development, with special focus on its cytotoxic mechanism in vitro. We employed the azoxymethane/dextran sulfate sodium model of colitis in Balb/C mice. Body weight and drinking were monitored throughout the experiment, and length of colon and lesions of the colon were recorded o…

0301 basic medicineFarmacologíaAnti-Inflammatory AgentsAzoxymethanePharmaceutical ScienceCaspase 3ApoptosisPharmacologyPlant RootsAnalytical ChemistryProinflammatory cytokine03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundIn vivoDrug DiscoverymedicineAnimalsHumansColitisMedicine Chinese TraditionalPharmacologyInflammationMice Inbred BALB CWound HealingbiologyChemistryAzoxymethaneLithospermumOrganic ChemistryDextran Sulfatemedicine.diseaseInflammatory Bowel DiseasesNitric oxide synthaseDisease Models Animal030104 developmental biologyComplementary and alternative medicineCaco-2ApoptosisColonic Neoplasmsbiology.proteinMolecular MedicineColitis UlcerativeFemaleCaco-2 CellsNaphthoquinonesPlanta medica
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