Search results for "blas"

showing 10 items of 2217 documents

Biocompatible hydrogels based on hyaluronic acid cross-linked with a polyaspartamide derivative as delivery systems for epithelial limbal cells.

2011

The aim of this work was to evaluate the potential use of hydrogels based on hyaluronic acid (HA) chemically cross-linked with α,β-poly(N-2-hydroxyethyl) (2-aminoethylcarbamate)-D,L-aspartamide (PHEA-EDA) as substitutes for the amniotic membrane able to release limbal cells for corneal regeneration. Hydrogels, shaped as films, with three different molar ratios (X) between PHEA-EDA and HA (X = 0.5, 1.0 and 1.5) have been investigated. First, it has been evaluated their swelling ability, hydrolytic resistance in simulated physiological fluid and cell compatibility by using human dermal fibroblasts chosen as a model cell line. Then adhesion studies in comparison with collagen gel, have been pe…

Cell SurvivalContact LensesDrug CompoundingCellPharmaceutical ScienceCell LineGlycosaminoglycanchemistry.chemical_compoundDrug Delivery SystemsHyaluronic acidPolymer chemistrymedicineCell AdhesionPolyaminesAnimalsHumansAmnionHyaluronic AcidCell adhesionAspartameEpithelial CellsHydrogelsFibroblastsIn vitroCoculture Techniquesmedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryCell cultureSelf-healing hydrogelsBiophysicssense organsCollagenRabbitsImmortalised cell lineInternational journal of pharmaceutics
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Differential regulation of apoptosis-associated genes by estrogen receptor alpha in human neuroblastoma cells

2012

Purpose: The neuroendocrinology of female sex hormones is of great interest for a variety of neuropsychiatric disorders. In fact, estrogens and estrogen receptors (ERs) exert neuromodulatory and neuroprotective functions. Here we investigated potential targets of the ER subtype alpha that may mediate neuroprotection and focused on direct modulators and downstream executors of apoptosis. Methods: We employed subclones of human neuroblastoma cells (SK-N-MC) stably transfected with one of the ER subtypes, ERalpha or ERbeta. Differences between the cell lines regarding the mRNA expression levels were examined by qPCR, changes on protein levels were examined by Western Blot and immunocytochemist…

Cell SurvivalEstrogen receptorApoptosisCaspase 3BiologyNeuroprotectionRats Sprague-DawleyNeuroblastomaDevelopmental NeuroscienceCell Line TumorAnimalsEstrogen Receptor betaHumansGene silencingAdaptor Proteins Signal TransducingNeuronsCaspase 3Estrogen Receptor alphaTransfectionMolecular biologyRatsUp-RegulationDNA-Binding ProteinsProto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-2NeurologyCell cultureApoptosisCancer researchNeurology (clinical)Apoptosis Regulatory ProteinsEstrogen receptor alphahormones hormone substitutes and hormone antagonistsTranscription FactorsRestorative Neurology and Neuroscience
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Effects of vinblastine, leucine, and histidine, and 3-methyladenine on autophagy in Ehrlich ascites cells.

1990

The microtubule inhibitor vinblastine causes accumulation of autophagic vacuoles in many cell types. In hepatocytes, many of the accumulated vacuoles are nascent, which has been interpreted to suggest that vinblastine acts by inhibiting the fusion of hydrolase-containing lysosomes with early autophagic vacuoles. However, our previous results suggested that, in Ehrlich ascites cells, vinblastine causes accumulation mainly of older autophagic vacuoles (AVs). This study was undertaken to further characterize the mode of action of vinblastine in these cells. The vinblastine-accumulated AVs were quantified by electron-microscopic morphometry. In addition, the effects of inhibitors of autophagic …

Cell SurvivalPhagocytosisClinical BiochemistryVacuoleProtein degradationBiologyVinblastinePathology and Forensic MedicinePhagocytosisMicrotubuleLeucineLysosomemedicineAutophagyTumor Cells CulturedAnimalsHumansHistidineCarcinoma Ehrlich TumorChildMolecular BiologyAdenineAutophagyVinblastineCell biologyMicroscopy Electronmedicine.anatomical_structureBiochemistryLeucinemedicine.drugExperimental and molecular pathology
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Cell Culture Characterization of Prooxidative Chain-Transfer Agents as Novel Cytostatic Drugs

2021

Prooxidative therapy is a well-established concept in infectiology and parasitology, in which prooxidative drugs like artemisinin and metronidazole play a pivotal clinical role. Theoretical considerations and earlier studies have indicated that prooxidative therapy might also represent a promising strategy in oncology. Here, we have investigated a novel class of prooxidative drugs, namely chain-transfer agents, as cytostatic agents in a series of human tumor cell lines in vitro. We have found that different chain-transfer agents of the lipophilic thiol class (like dodecane-1-thiol) elicited half-maximal effective concentrations in the low micromolar range in SY5Y cells (human neuroblastoma)…

Cell Survivallipophilic thiolCellular differentiationPharmaceutical ScienceOrganic chemistryfree radical chain reactionAntineoplastic AgentschemotherapyAntioxidantsArticleAnalytical Chemistryradical propagationHeLaQD241-441Coordination ComplexesNeuroblastomaDrug DiscoverymedicineTumor Cells CulturedHumansDoxorubicinSulfhydryl CompoundsPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryCytotoxicityoxidative cell deathCell Proliferationprooxidative drugbiologyChemistryHEK 293 cellslipid peroxidationbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseCytostatic Agentschain-transfer agentIn vitroChemistry (miscellaneous)Cell cultureCancer researchMolecular MedicineNitrogen OxidesDrug Screening Assays Antitumormedicine.drugrate-limiting stepMolecules
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Modulation of Cell Cycle Components by Epigenetic and Genetic Events

2005

Cell cycle progression is monitored by surveillance mechanisms, or cell cycle checkpoints, that ensure that initiation of a later event is coupled with the completion of an early cell cycle event. Deregulated proliferation is a characteristic feature of tumor cells. Moreover, defects in many of the molecules that regulate the cell cycle have been implicated in cancer formation and progression. Key among these are p53, the retinoblastoma protein (pRb) and its related proteins, p107 and pRb2/p130, and cdk inhibitors (p15, p16, p18, p19, p21, p27), all of which act to keep the cell cycle from progressing until all repairs to damaged DNA have been completed. The pRb (pRb/p16(INK4a)/cyclin D1) a…

Cell cycle checkpointCyclin ABiologymedicine.disease_causeModels BiologicalRetinoblastoma ProteinEpigenesis GeneticCyclin-dependent kinaseNeoplasmsmedicineAnimalsHumansEpigeneticsCell ProliferationCell growthCell CycleRetinoblastoma proteinHematologyCell cycleCell biologyOncologyDisease Progressionbiology.proteinTumor Suppressor Protein p53biological phenomena cell phenomena and immunityCarcinogenesisSignal TransductionSeminars in Oncology
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The ARF GAPs ELMOD1 and ELMOD3 act at the Golgi and cilia to regulate ciliogenesis and ciliary protein traffic

2022

ELMODs are a family of three mammalian paralogs that display GTPase activating protein (GAP) activity towards a uniquely broad array of ADP-ribosylation factor (ARF) family GTPases that includes ARF-like (ARL) proteins. ELMODs are ubiquitously expressed in mammalian tissues, highly conserved across eukaryotes, and ancient in origin, being present in the last eukaryotic common ancestor. We described functions of ELMOD2 in immortalized mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) in the regulation of cell division, microtubules, ciliogenesis, and mitochondrial fusion. Here, using similar strategies with the paralogs ELMOD1 and ELMOD3, we identify novel functions and locations of these cell regulators a…

Cell divisionGTPase-activating proteinGolgi ApparatusGTPaseBiologyMicrotubulesMitochondrial Dynamicssymbols.namesakeMiceMicrotubuleCiliogenesisAnimalsCiliaMolecular BiologyADP-Ribosylation FactorsCiliumGTPase-Activating ProteinsCorrectionCell BiologyGolgi apparatusFibroblastsCell biologyCytoskeletal Proteinsmitochondrial fusionsymbolsSignal Transduction
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The Embryonic Central Nervous System Lineages ofDrosophila melanogaster

1996

In Drosophila, central nervous system (CNS) formation starts with the delamination from the neuroectoderm of about 30 neuroblasts (NBs) per hemisegment. They give rise to approximately 350 neurons and 30 glial cells during embryonic development. Understanding the mechanisms leading to cell fate specification and differentiation in the CNS requires the identification of the NB lineages. The embryonic lineages derived from 17 NBs of the ventral part of the neuroectoderm have previously been described (Bossing et al., 1996). Here we present 13 lineages derived from the dorsal part of the neuroectoderm and we assign 12 of them to identified NBs. Together, the 13 lineages comprise approximately …

Cell divisionNeuroectodermLineage (evolution)food and beveragesAnatomyCell BiologyBiologyCell fate determinationEmbryonic stem cellCell biologynervous systemNeuroblastVentral nerve cordembryonic structuresGanglion mother cellMolecular BiologyDevelopmental BiologyDevelopmental Biology
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Proliferative activity and tumorigenic conversion: impact on cellular metabolism in 3-D culture

2001

Oxygen consumption, glucose, lactate, and ATP concentrations, as well as glucose and lactate turnover rates, have been studied in a three-dimensional carcinogenesis model of differently transformed rat embryo fibroblasts (spontaneously immortalized Rat1 and myc-transfected M1, and the ras-transfected, tumorigenic descendants Rat1-T1 and MR1) to determine metabolic alterations that accompany tumorigenic conversion. Various bioluminescence techniques, thymidine labeling, measurement of[Formula: see text] distributions with microelectrodes, and determination of cellular oxygen uptake rates (Q˙[Formula: see text]) have been applied. In the ras-transfected, tumorigenic spheroid types, the size d…

Cell divisionPhysiologyBiologymedicine.disease_causeDiffusionchemistry.chemical_compoundAdenosine TriphosphateOxygen ConsumptionSpheroids CellularmedicineAnimalsLactic AcidFibroblastCell Line TransformedCell growthCell BiologyTransfectionFibroblastsEmbryo MammalianRats Inbred F344In vitroRatsLactic acidOxygenCell Transformation NeoplasticGlucosemedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryBiochemistryembryonic structuresCarcinogenesisAdenosine triphosphateCell DivisionAmerican Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology
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Synthesis of insulin and its effects in Y79 human retinoblastoma cells

1994

This paper demonstrates that Y79 human retinoblastoma cells contain immunoreactive insulin (IRI) and release it in the medium. Cells cultured either in suspension or in monolayer showed a similar content of IRI. Moreover, in both conditions, IRI concentration was higher in cells cultured in serum-supplemented medium rather than in serum-free medium. Retinoblastoma cells are capable of synthesizing insulin. This was demonstrated by incubating Y79 cells with [3H]leucine. The synthesized radioactive insulin was separated and assayed by means of a HPLC procedure described in this paper. Both cell growth and [3H]thymidine and [3H]uridine incorporation into acid-insoluble fraction was reduced (-7…

Cell divisionmedicine.medical_treatmentBiologyCellular and Molecular Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compoundLeucinemedicineTumor Cells CulturedHumansInsulinRNA NeoplasmCycloheximideInsulin-Like Growth Factor IChromatography High Pressure LiquidCell growthInsulinGrowth factorEye NeoplasmsRetinoblastomaDNA Neoplasmretinoblastoma cellsSensory SystemsUridineIn vitroOphthalmologychemistryBiochemistryCell cultureThymidineCell Division
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Delayed ageing through damage protection by the Arf/p53 pathway.

2007

The tumour-suppressor pathway formed by the alternative reading frame protein of the Cdkn2a locus (Arf) and by p53 (also called Trp53) plays a central part in the detection and elimination of cellular damage, and this constitutes the basis of its potent cancer protection activity. Similar to cancer, ageing also results from the accumulation of damage and, therefore, we have reasoned that Arf/p53 could have anti-ageing activity by alleviating the load of age-associated damage. Here we show that genetically manipulated mice with increased, but otherwise normally regulated, levels of Arf and p53 present strong cancer resistance and have decreased levels of ageing-associated damage. These obser…

Cell signalingAgingTime FactorsTumor suppressor geneLongevityBiologymedicine.disease_causeAntioxidantsTranscriptomeMiceCDKN2ANeoplasmsmedicineAnimalsCells CulturedCyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor p16MultidisciplinaryCell cycleFibroblastsCell biologyOxidative StressAgeingDisease SusceptibilitySignal transductionTumor Suppressor Protein p53Oxidative stressNature
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