Search results for "Press"

showing 10 items of 15058 documents

Role of the DNA repair glycosylase OGG1 in the activation of murine splenocytes

2017

OGG1 (8-oxoguanine-DNA glycosylase) is the major DNA repair glycosylase removing the premutagenic DNA base modification 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanine (8-oxoG) from the genome of mammalian cells. In addition, there is accumulating evidence that OGG1 and its substrate 8-oxoG might function in the regulation of certain genes, which could account for an attenuated immune response observed in Ogg1-/- mice in several settings. Indications for at least two different mechanisms have been obtained. Thus, OGG1 could either act as an ancillary transcription factor cooperating with the lysine-specific demethylase LSD1 or as an activator of small GTPases. Here, we analysed the activation by lipopolysaccaride…

0301 basic medicineGuanineDNA RepairDNA repairp38 mitogen-activated protein kinasesBiologyBiochemistryDNA GlycosylasesMice03 medical and health sciencesAnimalsMolecular BiologyTranscription factorTumor Necrosis Factor-alphaKinaseActivator (genetics)MacrophagesDNACell BiologyBase excision repairMolecular biology030104 developmental biologyGene Expression RegulationDNA glycosylaseTumor necrosis factor alphaSpleenDNA DamageTranscription FactorsDNA Repair
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Toxicological implications of enzymatic control of reactive metabolites.

1990

Many foreign compounds are transformed into reactive metabolites, which may produce genotoxic effects by chemically altering critical biomolecules. Reactive metabolites are under the control of activating, inactivating and precursor sequestering enzymes. Such enzymes are under the long-term control of induction and repression, as well as the short-term control of post-translational modification and low molecular weight activators or inhibitors. In addition, the efficiency of these enzyme systems in preventing reactive metabolite-mediated toxicity is directed by their subcellular compartmentalization and isoenzymic multiplicity. Extrapolation from toxicological test systems to the human req…

0301 basic medicineHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisMetaboliteMolecular Sequence DataMutagenBiologyToxicologymedicine.disease_causeGene Expression Regulation Enzymologic03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineCytosolEthers CyclicMicrosomesmedicineHumansPsychological repressionCarcinogenGlutathione Transferasechemistry.chemical_classificationEpoxide Hydrolases030102 biochemistry & molecular biologyBase SequenceBiomoleculeGeneral MedicineIsoenzymesEnzymeBiochemistrychemistry030220 oncology & carcinogenesisToxicityEpoxy CompoundsXenobioticHumanexperimental toxicology
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Functional inhibition of Oct leads to HNF4α upregulation

2021

Organic cation transporters (human, OCT; mouse, Oct) are responsible for the intracellular uptake and detoxification of a broad spectrum of endogenous and exogenous substrates. The OCT1 gene SLC22A1 (human; mouse, Scl22a1) is transactivated by hepatocyte nuclear factor 4α (human, HNF4α; mouse, Hnf4α). HNF4α is a master regulator of hepatocyte differentiation and is frequently associated with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). In addition, the downregulation of HNF4α is associated with enhanced fibrogenesis. Our recent study revealed that hepatocarcinogenesis and fibrosis were enhanced with the loss of Oct3 (gene, Slc22a3). Notably, differences in Hnf4α expression, and in cholestasis and fibros…

0301 basic medicineHepatocyte differentiationCancer ResearchOncogeneChemistryArticlesGeneral Medicineorganic cation transportermedicine.diseaseMolecular biology03 medical and health sciencesHepatocyte nuclear factors030104 developmental biology0302 clinical medicineImmunology and Microbiology (miscellaneous)CholestasisDownregulation and upregulationApoptosisFibrosis030220 oncology & carcinogenesisGene expressionmedicineSLC22A3HNF4αSLC22A1Experimental and Therapeutic Medicine
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The Sea Urchin sns5 Chromatin Insulator Shapes the Chromatin Architecture of a Lentivirus Vector Integrated in the Mammalian Genome.

2016

Lentivirus vectors are presently the favorite vehicles for therapeutic gene transfer in hematopoietic cells. Nonetheless, these vectors integrate randomly throughout the genome, exhibiting variegation of transgene expression due to the spreading of heterochromatin into the vector sequences. Moreover, the cis-regulatory elements harbored by the vector could disturb the proper transcription of resident genes neighboring the integration site. The incorporation of chromatin insulators in flanking position to the transferred unit can alleviate both the above-mentioned dangerous effects, due to the insulator-specific barrier and enhancer-blocking activities. In this study, we report the valuable …

0301 basic medicineHeterochromatinTransgeneGenetic VectorsGreen Fluorescent ProteinsPharmaceutical ScienceGene ExpressionSettore BIO/11 - Biologia MolecolareBiochemistryGenomelentiviru03 medical and health sciencesMiceGeneticTranscription (biology)Genes ReporterTransduction GeneticCell Line TumorDrug DiscoveryGeneticsLeukocytesAnimalsHumansGATA1 Transcription FactorTransgenesEnhancerMolecular BiologyGenechromatin structureGeneticsGenomechromatin insulatorbiologyLentivirusbiology.organism_classificationgene therapyChromatinChromatinCell biology030104 developmental biologyHEK293 CellsSea UrchinsLentivirusMolecular MedicineBiological AssayInsulator Elementstransgene expressionHeLa CellsNucleic acid therapeutics
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FragClust and TestClust, two informatics tools for chemical structure hierarchical clustering analysis applied to lipidomics. The example of Alzheime…

2016

Lipidomic analysis is able to measure simultaneously thousands of compounds belonging to a few lipid classes. In each lipid class, compounds differ only by the acyl radical, ranging between C10:0 (capric acid) and C24:0 (lignoceric acid). Although some metabolites have a peculiar pathological role, more often compounds belonging to a single lipid class exert the same biological effect. Here, we present a lipidomics workflow that extracts the tandem mass spectrometry data from individual files and uses them to group compounds into structurally homogeneous clusters by chemical structure hierarchical clustering analysis (CHCA). The case-to-control peak area ratios of the metabolites are then a…

0301 basic medicineHigh-resolution mass spectrometrySettore MED/09 - Medicina InternaChemical structureComputational biologyPlasma biomarkers01 natural sciencesTriglycerideBiochemistryHomogeneous clustersAnalytical ChemistryCeramide03 medical and health sciencesAlzheimer DiseaseTandem Mass SpectrometryHealth informatics toolsLipidomicsHumansStatistical analysisData miningChromatography High Pressure LiquidAgedAged 80 and overMolecular StructureChemistry010401 analytical chemistryLipids0104 chemical sciencesHierarchical clusteringPhospholipid030104 developmental biologyWorkflowBiochemistryCase-Control StudiesSettore MED/26 - Neurologia
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Surface Micro Discharge–Cold Atmospheric Pressure Plasma Processing of Common House Cricket Acheta domesticus Powder: Antimicrobial Potential and Lip…

2021

The growing world population and the need to reduce the environmental impact of food production drive the exploration of novel protein sources. Insects are being cultivated, harvested, and processed to be applied in animal and human nutrition. The inherent microbial contamination of insect matrices requires risk management and decontamination strategies. Thermal sterilization results in unfavorable cooking effects and oxidation of fatty acids. The present study demonstrates the risk management in Acheta domesticus (home cricket) powder with a low-energy (8.7–22.0 mW/cm2, 5 min) semi-direct surface micro discharge (SMD)–cold atmospheric pressure plasma (CAPP). At a plasma power density lower…

0301 basic medicineHistologyAcheta domesticusBiomedical EngineeringBacillus cereusinsect powderBioengineeringAtmospheric-pressure plasmaBacillus subtilisMass spectrometrycold plasmaMicrobial decontaminationFood safetylipids03 medical and health sciences0404 agricultural biotechnologyHouse cricketFood scienceBacillus megaterium2. Zero hunger030109 nutrition & dieteticsbiologyChemistryfungimicrobial decontamination04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesSterilization (microbiology)biology.organism_classificationNon-thermal processing040401 food scienceLipids3. Good healthfood safety13. Climate actionAchetaCold plasmaInsect powderTP248.13-248.65BiotechnologyFrontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology
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Macrophage type modulates osteogenic differentiation of adipose tissue MSCs

2017

Since the reconstruction of large bone defects remains a challenge, knowledge about the biology of bone healing is desirable to develop novel strategies for improving the treatment of bone defects. In osteoimmunology, macrophages are the central component in the early stage of physiological response after bone injury and bone remodeling in the late stage. During this process, a switch of macrophage phenotype from pro-inflammatory (M1) to anti-inflammatory (M2) is observed. An appealing option for bone regeneration would be to exploit this regulatory role for the benefit of osteogenic differentiation of osteoprogenitor cells (e.g., mesenchymal stem cells; MSCs) and to eventually utilize this…

0301 basic medicineHistologyMacrophageOsteoimmunologyAdipose tissueBone healingCell CommunicationBiologyBone morphogenetic protein 2Bone remodelingCell LinePathology and Forensic MedicineMSC03 medical and health sciencesCalcification PhysiologicAll institutes and research themes of the Radboud University Medical CenterOsteogenesisOsteogenic differentiationHumansBone regenerationCell ProliferationBone InjuryMacrophagesMesenchymal stem cellCell PolarityCell DifferentiationMesenchymal Stem CellsRegular ArticleCell BiologyAlkaline PhosphataseCoculture TechniquesCell biology030104 developmental biologyReconstructive and regenerative medicine Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 10]Adipose TissueGene Expression RegulationCell culture modelImmunologyCytokinesBiomarkersCell and Tissue Research
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Role of saccharomyces cerevisiae nutrient signaling pathways during winemaking: a phenomics approach

2020

The ability of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae to adapt to the changing environment of industrial processes lies in the activation and coordination of many molecular pathways. The most relevant ones are nutrient signaling pathways because they control growth and stress response mechanisms as a result of nutrient availability or scarcity and, therefore, leave an ample margin to improve yeast biotechnological performance. A standardized grape juice fermentation assay allowed the analysis of mutants for different elements of many nutrient signaling pathways under different conditions (low/high nitrogen and different oxygenation levels) to allow genetic-environment interactions to be analyze…

0301 basic medicineHistologylcsh:BiotechnologySaccharomyces cerevisiaeBiomedical EngineeringWineBioengineering02 engineering and technologySaccharomyces cerevisiaeNutrient signaling03 medical and health scienceslcsh:TP248.13-248.65PKARas2wineTranscription factorWinemaking2. Zero hungerFermentation in winemakingchemistry.chemical_classificationGln3biologynutrient signaling021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologybiology.organism_classificationYeast3. Good health030104 developmental biologyEnzymeBiochemistrychemistrySnf1 kinase[SDE]Environmental SciencesFermentation0210 nano-technologyglucose repressionTORC1 pathwayBiotechnology
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Childhood cancer predisposition syndromes-A concise review and recommendations by the Cancer Predisposition Working Group of the Society for Pediatri…

2017

Heritable predisposition is an important cause of cancer in children and adolescents. Although a large number of cancer predisposition genes and their associated syndromes and malignancies have already been described, it appears likely that there are more pediatric cancer patients in whom heritable cancer predisposition syndromes have yet to be recognized. In a consensus meeting in the beginning of 2016, we convened experts in Human Genetics and Pediatric Hematology/Oncology to review the available data, to categorize the large amount of information, and to develop recommendations regarding when a cancer predisposition syndrome should be suspected in a young oncology patient. This review su…

0301 basic medicineHistoryMedizinGene Expression0302 clinical medicineNeoplasm Proteins/geneticsNeoplasmsChildGenetics (clinical)Societies Medicalddc:618HematologyJuvenile myelomonocytic leukemiaCancer predispositionSyndromeFocus Groups21st Century3. Good healthNeoplasm Proteins030220 oncology & carcinogenesisHematologic NeoplasmsGenetic Testing/methodsmedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentGenetics MedicalGenetic CounselingHistory 21st CenturyMedical/history/instrumentation/methodsFamilial adenomatous polyposis03 medical and health sciencesInternal medicineGeneticsmedicineHumansFocus Groups/methodsGenetic Predisposition to DiseaseGenetic TestingIntensive care medicineGenetic Counseling/ethicsbusiness.industryHematologic Neoplasms/diagnosis/genetics/pathologyCancermedicine.diseasePediatric cancerHuman genetics030104 developmental biologyLi–Fraumeni syndromeNeoplasms/diagnosis/genetics/pathologyMutationMedical/historySocietiesbusinessAmerican journal of medical genetics. Part A
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The analysis of estrogen receptor-α positive breast cancer stem-like cells unveils a high expression of the serpin proteinase inhibitor PI-9: Possibl…

2016

Abstract Breast cancer stem cells seem to play important roles in breast tumor recurrence and endocrine therapy resistance, although the underlying mechanisms have not been well established. Moreover, in some tumor systems the immunosurveillance failure against cancer cells has been related to the presence of the granzyme B inhibitor PI-9. This study explored the status of PI-9 in tumorspheres isolated from estrogen receptor-α positive (ERα+) breast cancer MCF7 cells. Studies were performed in tertiary tumorspheres which possess high levels of stemness markers (Nanog, Oct3/4 and Sox2) and self-renewal ability. The exposure to estrogens (17-β estradiol and genistein) increased the number and…

0301 basic medicineHomeobox protein NANOGReceptors CXCR4Cancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtyEstrogen receptorBreast NeoplasmsBiologyp38 Mitogen-Activated Protein KinasesGranzymes03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineBreast cancerSOX2Internal medicineserpin proteinase inhibitor 9 breast cancer stem-like cells breast cancer estrogen receptorsSettore BIO/10 - BiochimicamedicineHumansSerpinsCell ProliferationEstrogen Receptor alphaCancermedicine.diseaseGenisteinGene Expression Regulation NeoplasticImmunosurveillance030104 developmental biologyEndocrinologyOncology030220 oncology & carcinogenesisCancer cellMCF-7 CellsNeoplastic Stem CellsCancer researchFemaleNeoplasm Recurrence LocalStem cellSignal Transduction
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