Search results for "CELLULAR"

showing 10 items of 6449 documents

Acute telomerase components depletion triggers oxidative stress as an early event previous to telomeric shortening

2018

Loss of function of dyskerin (DKC1), NOP10 and TIN2 are responsible for different inheritance patterns of Dyskeratosis congenita (DC; ORPHA1775). They are key components of telomerase (DKC1 and NOP10) and shelterin (TIN2), and play an important role in telomere homeostasis. They participate in several fundamental cellular processes by contributing to Dyskeratosis congenita through mechanisms that are not fully understood. Presence of oxidative stress was postulated to result from telomerase ablation. However, the resulting disturbed redox status can promote telomere attrition by generating a vicious circle, which promotes cellular senescence. This fact prompted us to study if acute loss of …

0301 basic medicineAgingTelomeraseTelomere-Binding ProteinsClinical BiochemistryCell Cycle ProteinsBiologymedicine.disease_causeBiochemistryDyskeratosis CongenitaDyskerin03 medical and health sciencesTelomere HomeostasisRibonucleoproteins Small NucleolarmedicineHumanslcsh:QH301-705.5TelomeraseCellular SenescenceTelomere ShorteningRibonucleoproteinlcsh:R5-920TelomeropathiesOrganic ChemistryNuclear ProteinsShelterinmedicine.diseaseMolecular biologyTelomereCell biologyOxidative Stress030104 developmental biologylcsh:Biology (General)DNA damageRNA InterferenceAntioxidantlcsh:Medicine (General)Oxidative stressDyskeratosis congenitaResearch PaperHeLa CellsRedox Biology
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Endothelial progenitor cells in ageing

2016

“The senescence status of somatic stem/progenitor cells contributes to ageing process”, and “an individual is as old as old are its stem cells”. These quotes represent the concepts, which are actually object of investigations of researchers involved in ageing studies.

0301 basic medicineAgingbusiness.industryCellular senescenceCell biologyEndothelial stem cell03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biologyVasculogenesisAgeingMedicineAnimalsHumansSettore MED/05 - Patologia ClinicaProgenitor cellbusinessCellular SenescenceDevelopmental BiologyEndothelial Progenitor CellsEndothelial progenitor cells ageing
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Longevity: Lesson from model organisms

2019

Research on longevity and healthy aging promises to increase our lifespan and decrease the burden of degenerative diseases with important social and economic effects. Many aging theories have been proposed, and important aging pathways have been discovered. Model organisms have had a crucial role in this process because of their short lifespan, cheap maintenance, and manipulation possibilities. Yeasts, worms, fruit flies, or mammalian models such as mice, monkeys, and recently, dogs, have helped shed light on aging processes. Genes and molecular mechanisms that were found to be critical in simple eukaryotic cells and species have been confirmed in humans mainly by the functional analysis of…

0301 basic medicineAginglcsh:QH426-470Settore MED/06 - Oncologia Medicamedia_common.quotation_subjectved/biology.organism_classification_rank.speciesLongevityReviewBiologySignal transductionSettore MED/08 - Anatomia PatologicaModels Biologicalmodel systems03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineModel systemYeastsGeneticsAnimalsHumansHealthy agingSettore MED/49 - Scienze Tecniche Dietetiche ApplicateModel organismGeneGenetics (clinical)Cellular Senescencemedia_commonMammalsved/biologyLongevityEukaryotalcsh:GeneticsSettore MED/18 - Chirurgia Generale030104 developmental biologyEvolutionary biologyHuman longevityModels AnimalDrosophilaMolecular senescence030217 neurology & neurosurgeryBiomarkers
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Autophagy during ageing – from Dr Jekyll to Mr Hyde

2017

Autophagy is a ubiquitous catabolic process, which causes cellular bulk degradation through vesicular engulfment of obsolete, damaged or harmful cytoplasmic components. While autophagy regulates cellular homeostasis during development and in youth, there is mounting evidence that autophagy becomes increasingly dysfunctional with age. Recent work in Caenorhabditis elegans even suggests that late-life dysfunctional autophagy exhibits detrimental effects that drive the ageing process. Other studies link elevated autophagy closely to increased health and longevity. This review aims to put these apparently opposing views into perspective and define our current understanding of the role of autoph…

0301 basic medicineAgingmedia_common.quotation_subjectLongevityCellular homeostasisSaccharomyces cerevisiaeBiochemistry03 medical and health sciencesAutophagyAnimalsHumansCaenorhabditis elegansMolecular BiologyCaenorhabditis elegansmedia_commonbiologyAutophagyLongevityCell BiologyCatabolic Processbiology.organism_classificationCell biologyDrosophila melanogaster030104 developmental biologyAgeingSignal TransductionThe FEBS Journal
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Peripapillary fluorescence lifetime reveals age-dependent changes using fluorescence lifetime imaging ophthalmoscopy in rats

2017

Abstract Many fundus diseases accompany fundus autofluorescence change. Fluorescence lifetime imaging ophthalmoscope (FLIO) is a latest technique in imaging fundus autofluorescence. With FLIO, the fundus fluorescence lifetime (FLT) is recorded topographically, assisting to diagnose and monitor multiple fundus diseases. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the repeatability of FLT using FLIO on adult rats and to analyze the age-dependency of the peripapillary FLT of the fundus in a short spectral channel (498–560 nm) and a long spectral channel (560–720 nm). Sprague Dawley rats (n of eyes = 10) were used for repeatability experiments. Age-dependent changes were investigated in young (tw…

0301 basic medicineAgingmedicine.medical_specialtyFluorescence-lifetime imaging microscopygenetic structuresFundus OculiOptic DiskAge dependentFundus (eye)FluorescenceRetinaRats Sprague-DawleyOphthalmoscopy03 medical and health sciencesCellular and Molecular Neuroscience0302 clinical medicineOphthalmologySprague dawley ratsAnimalsMedicineFluorescein Angiographymedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryReproducibility of ResultsRepeatabilityFluorescenceeye diseasesSensory SystemsFundus autofluorescenceRatsOphthalmoscopyOphthalmology030104 developmental biologyModels Animal030221 ophthalmology & optometryFemalesense organsbusinessExperimental Eye Research
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Sodium functions as a negative allosteric modulator of the oxytocin receptor

2017

Abstract The oxytocin receptor, a class A G protein coupled receptor (GPCR), is essentially involved in the physiology of reproduction. Two parameters are crucially important to support high-affinity agonist binding of the receptor: Mg2+ and cholesterol, both acting as positive modulators. Using displacement assays with a high-affinity fluorescent antagonist (OTAN-A647), we now show that sodium functions as a negative allosteric modulator of the oxytocin receptor. In membranes from HEK293 cells stably expressing the oxytocin receptor, oxytocin binding occurred with about 15-fold lower affinity when sodium chloride was increased from 0 to 300 mM, whereas antagonist binding remained largely u…

0301 basic medicineAgonistAllosteric modulatormedicine.drug_classSodiumBiophysicschemistry.chemical_elementBreast NeoplasmsSodium ChlorideOxytocinBiochemistryPotassium Chloride03 medical and health sciencesAllosteric RegulationCell Line TumormedicineHumansAmino Acid SequenceReceptorFluorescent DyesG protein-coupled receptorDose-Response Relationship DrugSequence Homology Amino AcidChemistryCell MembraneCell BiologyOxytocin receptorRecombinant ProteinsCell biologyCholesterolHEK293 Cells030104 developmental biologyOxytocinReceptors OxytocinMutagenesis Site-DirectedCalciumFemaleSequence Alignmenthormones hormone substitutes and hormone antagonistsIntracellularProtein Bindingmedicine.drugBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Biomembranes
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Desensitization of cAMP Accumulation via Human β3-Adrenoceptors Expressed in Human Embryonic Kidney Cells by Full, Partial, and Biased Agonists

2019

β3-Adrenoceptors couple not only to cAMP formation but, at least in some cell types, also to alternative signaling pathways such as phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK). β3-Adrenoceptor agonists are used in long-term symptomatic treatment of the overactive bladder syndrome; it is only poorly understood which signaling pathway mediates the clinical response and whether it undergoes agonist-induced desensitization. Therefore, we used human embryonic kidney cells stably transfected with human β3-adrenoceptors to compare coupling of ligands with various degrees of efficacy, including biased agonists, to cAMP formation and ERK phosphorylation, particularly regarding des…

0301 basic medicineAgonistMAPK/ERK pathwaymedicine.drug_classmedicine.medical_treatmentdesensitization03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundpartial agonism0302 clinical medicinecAMPIsoprenalinemedicinePharmacology (medical)β3-adrenoceptorOriginal ResearchDesensitization (medicine)PharmacologyForskolinKinaselcsh:RM1-950extracellular signal-related kinaseCell biologylcsh:Therapeutics. Pharmacology030104 developmental biologybiased agonismchemistry030220 oncology & carcinogenesisPhosphorylationSignal transductionmedicine.drugFrontiers in Pharmacology
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Subchronic vortioxetine treatment -but not escitalopram- enhances pyramidal neuron activity in the rat prefrontal cortex.

2017

Abstract Vortioxetine (VOR) is a multimodal antidepressant drug. VOR is a 5-HT 3 -R, 5-HT 7 -R and 5-HT 1D -R antagonist, 5-HT 1B -R partial agonist, 5-HT 1A -R agonist, and serotonin transporter (SERT) inhibitor. VOR shows pro-cognitive activity in animal models and beneficial effects on cognitive dysfunction in major depressive patients. Here we compared the effects of 14-day treatments with VOR and escitalopram (ESC, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor) on neuronal activity in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC). Ten groups of rats (5 standard, 5 depleted of 5-HT with p -chlorophenylalanine -pCPA-, used as model of cognitive impairment) were fed with control food or with two doses of …

0301 basic medicineAgonistMalegenetic structuresmedicine.drug_classSerotonin reuptake inhibitorAction PotentialsPrefrontal CortexPharmacologyCitalopramSulfidesPartial agonistPiperazines03 medical and health sciencesCellular and Molecular Neuroscience0302 clinical medicinemedicinePremovement neuronal activityAnimalsRats WistarSerotonin transporterPharmacologyVortioxetinebiologyPyramidal CellsAntagonistAntidepressive AgentsRats030104 developmental biologybiology.proteinAntidepressantVortioxetinesense organsPsychologyNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgerySelective Serotonin Reuptake InhibitorsNeuropharmacology
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GABAA receptors in the ventral tegmental area control the outcome of a social competition in rats

2018

Social dominance can be attained through social competitions. Recent work in both humans and rodents has identified trait anxiety as a crucial predictor of social competitiveness. In addition, the anxiolytic GABAA positive modulator, diazepam, injected either systemically or into the ventral tegmental area (VTA) was shown to increase social dominance. Here, we investigated the impact of pharmacologically targeting GABAA receptors in the VTA for the outcome of a social competition between two unfamiliar male rats, one of them infused with vehicle and the other one with the drug under study. We show that infusion of the GABAA receptor agonist, muscimol, reduced anxiety-like behaviors and enha…

0301 basic medicineAgonistZolpidemmedicine.drug_classgamma-Aminobutyric acid03 medical and health sciencesCellular and Molecular Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicinemedicinePharmacologyBenzodiazepineGABAA receptorbusiness.industrymusculoskeletal neural and ocular physiologyBicucullineVentral tegmental area030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemMuscimolchemistrybusinessNeurosciencepsychological phenomena and processes030217 neurology & neurosurgerymedicine.drugNeuropharmacology
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Estradiol, acting through ERα, induces endothelial non-classic renin-angiotensin system increasing angiotensin 1–7 production

2016

Intracellular renin-angiotensin system (RAS) can operate independently of the circulating RAS. Estrogens provide protective effects by modulating the RAS. Our aim was to investigate the effect of estradiol (E2) on angiotensin converting enzymes (ACE) 1 and ACE2 expression and activities in human endothelial cells (HUVEC), and the role of estrogen receptors (ER). The results confirmed the presence of active intracellular RAS in HUVEC. Physiological concentrations of E2 induced a concentration-dependent increase of ACE1 and ACE2 mRNA expression and ACE1, but not ACE2, protein levels. ACE1 and ACE2 enzymatic activities were also induced with E2. These effects were mediated through ERα activati…

0301 basic medicineAgonistmedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.drug_classEstrogen receptorPeptidyl-Dipeptidase A030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyBiologyBiochemistryEstrogen Receptor AntagonistsCiencias Biológicas03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineEndocrinologyPiperidinesInternal medicineRenin–angiotensin systemHuman Umbilical Vein Endothelial CellsmedicineHumansFulvestrantMolecular BiologyESTROGEN RECEPTORDose-Response Relationship DrugEstradiolEstrogen Receptor alphaANGIOTENSIN CONVERTING ENZYMESBioquímica y Biología MolecularRENIN ANGIOTENSIN SYSTEMPeptide FragmentsEndothelial stem cellESTROGEN030104 developmental biologyEndocrinologyGene Expression RegulationEstrogenENDOTHELIAL CELLPyrazolesAngiotensin-Converting Enzyme 2Estrogen Receptor AntagonistsAngiotensin IEstrogen receptor alphaCIENCIAS NATURALES Y EXACTAShormones hormone substitutes and hormone antagonistsIntracellularMolecular and Cellular Endocrinology
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