Search results for "ISIA"

showing 10 items of 1032 documents

From ancient herb to modern drug: Artemisia annua and artemisinin for cancer therapy.

2017

Artemisia annua L. is used throughout Asia and Africa as tea and press juice to treat malaria and related symptomes (fever, chills). Its active ingredient, artemisinin (ARS), has been developed as antimalarial drug and is used worldwide. Interestingly, the bioactivity is not restricted to malaria treatment. We and others found that ARS-type drugs also reveal anticancer in vitro and in vivo. In this review, we give a systematic overview of the literature published over the past two decades until the end of 2016. Like other natural products, ARS acts in a multi-specific manner against tumors. The cellular response of ARS and its derivatives (dihydroartemisinin, artesunate, artemether, arteeth…

0301 basic medicineCancer ResearchNecroptosismedicine.medical_treatmentArtemisia annuaDihydroartemisininPharmacologyArtemisia annua03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineNeoplasmsmedicineHumansArtemetherArtemisininPI3K/AKT/mTOR pathwaybiologybiology.organism_classificationArtemisininsNeoplasm ProteinsGene Expression Regulation NeoplasticDrug repositioningOxidative Stress030104 developmental biologychemistryArtesunate030220 oncology & carcinogenesismedicine.drugSeminars in cancer biology
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Yeast Cth2 protein represses the translation of ARE-containing mRNAs in response to iron deficiency

2018

In response to iron deficiency, the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae undergoes a metabolic remodeling in order to optimize iron utilization. The tandem zinc finger (TZF)-containing protein Cth2 plays a critical role in this adaptation by binding and promoting the degradation of multiple mRNAs that contain AU-rich elements (AREs). Here, we demonstrate that Cth2 also functions as a translational repressor of its target mRNAs. By complementary approaches, we demonstrate that Cth2 protein inhibits the translation of SDH4, which encodes a subunit of succinate dehydrogenase, and CTH2 mRNAs in response to iron depletion. Both the AREs within SDH4 and CTH2 transcripts, and the Cth2 TZF are es…

0301 basic medicineCancer ResearchRNA StabilityAdaptation BiologicalGene ExpressionBiochemistryGene Expression Regulation FungalGene expressionMedicine and Health SciencesExpressió genèticaGenetics (clinical)Regulation of gene expressionZinc fingerbiologyMessenger RNANutritional DeficienciesEukaryotaTranslation (biology)Iron DeficienciesCell biologyNucleic acidsDNA-Binding ProteinsCellular Structures and OrganellesResearch ArticleSaccharomyces cerevisiae Proteinslcsh:QH426-470IronProtein subunitSaccharomyces cerevisiaeSaccharomyces cerevisiaeDNA constructionRegulatory Sequences Ribonucleic Acid03 medical and health sciencesExtraction techniquesTristetraprolinPolysomeGeneticsRNA MessengerMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNutritionAU Rich ElementsAU-rich elementBiology and life sciencesOrganismsFungiCell Biologybiology.organism_classificationYeastRNA extractionResearch and analysis methodslcsh:GeneticsMolecular biology techniques030104 developmental biologyPolyribosomesPlasmid ConstructionIron DeficiencyRNAProtein TranslationRibosomesTranscription Factors
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Nut1/Hos1 and Sas2/Rpd3 control the H3 acetylation of two different sets of osmotic stress-induced genes

2019

Epigenetic information is able to interact with the cellular environment and could be especially useful for reprograming gene expression in response to a physiological perturbation. In fact the genes induced or repressed by osmotic stress undergo significant changes in terms of the levels of various histone modifications, especially in the acetylation levels of histone H3. Exposing yeast to high osmolarity results in the activation of stress-activated protein kinase Hog1, which plays a central role in gene expression control. We evaluated the connection between the presence of Hog1 and changes in histone H3 acetylation in stress-regulated genes. We found a parallel increase in the acetylati…

0301 basic medicineCancer ResearchSaccharomyces cerevisiae Proteinschip-on-chipSaccharomyces cerevisiaeEpigenesis GeneticHistones03 medical and health sciencesHistone H30302 clinical medicineOsmotic PressureGene Expression Regulation FungalGene expressionEpigeneticsHistone H3 acetylationMolecular BiologyHistone AcetyltransferasesRegulation of gene expressionMediator ComplexbiologyepigeneticsAcetylationCell biologyChromatinDNA-Binding ProteinsHistone Code030104 developmental biologyHistoneHistone acetylationAcetylation030220 oncology & carcinogenesisbiology.proteinchromatinhog1osmotic stressMitogen-Activated Protein Kinasesgene regulationProtein Processing Post-TranslationalTranscription FactorsResearch Paper
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The Phenotypic Plasticity of Duplicated Genes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and the Origin of Adaptations

2016

Gene and genome duplication are the major sources of biological innovations in plants and animals. Functional and transcriptional divergence between the copies after gene duplication has been considered the main driver of innovations . However, here we show that increased phenotypic plasticity after duplication plays a more major role than thought before in the origin of adaptations. We perform an exhaustive analysis of the transcriptional alterations of duplicated genes in the unicellular eukaryote Saccharomyces cerevisiae when challenged with five different environmental stresses. Analysis of the transcriptomes of yeast shows that gene duplication increases the transcriptional response to…

0301 basic medicineCell PlasticityEvolutionary biologySaccharomyces cerevisiaeQH426-470InvestigationsBiologyGenomeEvolution MolecularTranscriptome03 medical and health sciencesEvolution by gene duplicationGene DuplicationGene duplicationGeneticsAnimalsSelection GeneticTranscriptional profilesMolecular BiologyGenePhylogenyGenetics (clinical)GeneticsPhenotypic plasticityModels GeneticPlantsAdaptation Physiological030104 developmental biologyWhole-genome duplicatesSubfunctionalizationGenome FungalAdaptationGene functionSmall-scale duplicates
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Defining Human Tyrosine Kinase Phosphorylation Networks Using Yeast as an In Vivo Model Substrate.

2017

Systematic assessment of tyrosine kinase-substrate relationships is fundamental to a better understanding of cellular signaling and its profound alterations in human diseases such as cancer. In human cells, such assessments are confounded by complex signaling networks, feedback loops, conditional activity, and intra-kinase redundancy. Here we address this challenge by exploiting the yeast proteome as an in vivo model substrate. We individually expressed 16 human non-receptor tyrosine kinases (NRTKs) in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and identified 3,279 kinase-substrate relationships involving 1,351 yeast phosphotyrosine (pY) sites. Based on the yeast data without prior information, we generated …

0301 basic medicineCell signalingHistologySaccharomyces cerevisiae ProteinsSaccharomyces cerevisiaeAmino Acid MotifsSaccharomyces cerevisiaeInteractomeReceptor tyrosine kinaseArticlePathology and Forensic Medicine03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundHumansProtein Interaction MapsPhosphorylationbiologyTyrosine phosphorylationCell BiologyProtein-Tyrosine Kinasesbiology.organism_classificationYeastCell biology030104 developmental biologychemistrybiology.proteinPhosphorylationTyrosine kinaseSequence AlignmentCell systems
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NFATc1 releases BCL6-dependent repression of CCR2 agonist expression in peritoneal macrophages fromSaccharomyces cerevisiaeinfected mice

2016

The link between the extensive usage of calcineurin (CN) inhibitors cyclosporin A and tacrolimus (FK506) in transplantation medicine and the increasing rate of opportunistic infections within this segment of patients is alarming. Currently, how peritoneal infections are favored by these drugs, which impair the activity of several signaling pathways including the Ca(++) /CN/NFAT, Ca(++) /CN/cofilin, Ca(++) /CN/BAD, and NF-κB networks, is unknown. Here, we show that Saccharomyces cerevisiae infection of peritoneal resident macrophages triggers the transient nuclear translocation of NFATc1β isoforms, resulting in a coordinated, CN-dependent induction of the Ccl2, Ccl7, and Ccl12 genes, all enc…

0301 basic medicineChemokineReceptors CCR2Calcineurin InhibitorsImmunologySaccharomyces cerevisiaeOpportunistic InfectionsCCL7MonocytesMice03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineCyclosporin aAnimalsProtein IsoformsImmunology and AllergyChemokine CCL7Promoter Regions GeneticCCL12Transcription factorChemokine CCL2NFATC Transcription FactorsbiologyCalcineurinNF-kappa BNFATNFATC Transcription FactorsMonocyte Chemoattractant Proteins3. Good healthCalcineurinProtein Transport030104 developmental biology030220 oncology & carcinogenesisMacrophages PeritonealProto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-6biology.proteinCancer researchEuropean Journal of Immunology
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A role for Mog1 in H2Bub1 and H3K4me3 regulation affecting RNAPII transcription and mRNA export.

2018

17 páginas, 12 figuras.

0301 basic medicineChromatin ImmunoprecipitationSaccharomyces cerevisiae ProteinsTranscription GeneticSaccharomyces cerevisiaeBiologyyeastEpigenetic RepressionBiochemistryRNA TransportHistones03 medical and health sciencesHistone H30302 clinical medicineTranscription (biology)Gene Expression Regulation FungalGeneticsHistone H2BMonoubiquitinationEpigeneticsRNA MessengerMolecular BiologyGenemRNA exportepigeneticsUbiquitinationMethylationArticlesTATA-Box Binding ProteinYeastCell biology030104 developmental biologyran GTP-Binding ProteinH3K4me3EpigeneticsRNA Polymerase IItranscriptionTranscription030217 neurology & neurosurgeryH2B ubiquitinationEMBO reports
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Aneuploidy and Ethanol Tolerance in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

2019

Response to environmental stresses is a key factor for microbial organism growth. One of the major stresses for yeasts in fermentative environments is ethanol. Saccharomyces cerevisiae is the most tolerant species in its genus, but intraspecific ethanol-tolerance variation exists. Although, much effort has been done in the last years to discover evolutionary paths to improve ethanol tolerance, this phenotype is still hardly understood. Here, we selected five strains with different ethanol tolerances, and used comparative genomics to determine the main factors that can explain these phenotypic differences. Surprisingly, the main genomic feature, shared only by the highest ethanol-tolerant st…

0301 basic medicineChromosome IIIlcsh:QH426-470Saccharomyces cerevisiaeAneuploidycomparative genomicsSaccharomyces cerevisiaeEthanol toleranceBiologyTranscriptome03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineGeneticsmedicineaneuploidyGenetics (clinical)Wine yeastsGeneticsComparative genomicsComparative genomicsStrain (biology)chromosome IIIChromosomewine yeastsAneuploidybiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseasePhenotypeethanol tolerancelcsh:Genetics030104 developmental biology030220 oncology & carcinogenesisMolecular MedicinePloidyFrontiers in Genetics
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Deep learning architectures for prediction of nucleosome positioning from sequences data

2018

Abstract Background Nucleosomes are DNA-histone complex, each wrapping about 150 pairs of double-stranded DNA. Their function is fundamental for one of the primary functions of Chromatin i.e. packing the DNA into the nucleus of the Eukaryote cells. Several biological studies have shown that the nucleosome positioning influences the regulation of cell type-specific gene activities. Moreover, computational studies have shown evidence of sequence specificity concerning the DNA fragment wrapped into nucleosomes, clearly underlined by the organization of particular DNA substrings. As the main consequence, the identification of nucleosomes on a genomic scale has been successfully performed by com…

0301 basic medicineComputer scienceCellBiochemistrychemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineStructural Biologylcsh:QH301-705.5Nucleosome classificationSequenceSettore INF/01 - InformaticabiologyApplied MathematicsEpigeneticComputer Science ApplicationsChromatinNucleosomesmedicine.anatomical_structurelcsh:R858-859.7EukaryoteDNA microarrayDatabases Nucleic AcidComputational biologySaccharomyces cerevisiaelcsh:Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics03 medical and health sciencesDeep LearningmedicineNucleosomeAnimalsHumansEpigeneticsMolecular BiologyGeneBase Sequencebusiness.industryDeep learningResearchReproducibility of Resultsbiology.organism_classificationYeastNucleosome classification Epigenetic Deep learning networks Recurrent neural networks030104 developmental biologylcsh:Biology (General)chemistryRecurrent neural networksROC CurveDeep learning networksArtificial intelligenceNeural Networks Computerbusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryDNABMC Bioinformatics
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Starter cultures as biocontrol strategy to prevent Brettanomyces bruxellensis proliferation in wine

2017

Brettanomyces bruxellensis is a common and significant wine spoilage microorganism. B. bruxellensis strains generally detain the molecular basis to produce compounds that are detrimental for the organoleptic quality of the wine, including some classes of volatile phenols that derive from the sequential bioconversion of specific hydroxycinnamic acids such as ferulate and p-coumarate. Although B. bruxellensis can be detected at any stage of the winemaking process, it is typically isolated at the end of the alcoholic fermentation (AF), before the staring of the spontaneous malolactic fermentation (MLF) or during barrel aging. For this reason, the endemic diffusion of B. bruxellensis leads to c…

0301 basic medicineCoumaric Acids030106 microbiologyFood spoilageOrganolepticMalatesBrettanomyces bruxellensisBrettanomycesWineFood ContaminationSaccharomyces cerevisiaeEthanol fermentationApplied Microbiology and Biotechnology03 medical and health sciencesSaccharomycesmalolactic fermentation (MLF)PhenolsLactobacillalesMalolactic fermentationLactic acid bacteriaVitisFood scienceWinemakingWinebiologyBrettanomyces bruxellensis; Wine; Saccharomyces; malolactic fermentation (MLF); Lactic acid bacteriadigestive oral and skin physiologyfood and beveragesGeneral MedicineMini-Reviewbiology.organism_classificationYeastBrettanomyces bruxellensisBiological Control AgentsAlcoholsFermentationFood MicrobiologyMLFSettore AGR/16 - Microbiologia AgrariaBiotechnologyApplied Microbiology and Biotechnology
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