Search results for "cycle"

showing 10 items of 3119 documents

DNA damage causes TP53-dependent coupling of self-renewal and senescence pathways in embryonal carcinoma cells.

2013

Recent studies have highlighted an apparently paradoxical link between self-renewal and senescence triggered by DNA damage in certain cell types. In addition, the finding that TP53 can suppress senescence has caused a re-evaluation of its functional role in regulating these outcomes. To investigate these phenomena and their relationship to pluripotency and senescence, we examined the response of the TP53-competent embryonal carcinoma (EC) cell line PA-1 to etoposide-induced DNA damage. Nuclear POU5F1/OCT4A and P21CIP1 were upregulated in the same cells following etoposide-induced G 2M arrest. However, while accumulating in the karyosol, the amount of OCT4A was reduced in the chromatin fract…

SenescenceCyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor p21OCT4A/POU5F1Embryonal Carcinoma Stem CellssenescenceDNA RepairDNA repairDNA damagetumor cellsBiologyProtein Serine-Threonine Kinasesself-renewalHistonesAurora KinasesCell Line TumorReportAutophagyAurora Kinase BHumansTP53PhosphorylationRNA Small InterferingMolecular BiologyMitosisCellular SenescenceCyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor p16EtoposideOvarian NeoplasmsEmbryonal Carcinoma Stem CellsCell BiologyG2-M DNA damage checkpointbeta-GalactosidasepluripotencyAntineoplastic Agents PhytogenicChromatinUp-RegulationG2 Phase Cell Cycle CheckpointsCheckpoint Kinase 2Cancer researchDNA damageFemaleRNA InterferenceRad51 RecombinaseTumor Suppressor Protein p53Cell agingOctamer Transcription Factor-3Developmental BiologyCell cycle (Georgetown, Tex.)
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Oxidative Stress and the Epigenetics of Cell Senescence: Insights from Progeroid Syndromes.

2019

Background: Cell senescence constitutes a critical process to respond to a variety of insults and adverse circumstances. Senescence involves the detention of DNA replication and cell proliferation, and hence, genetic programs associated with DNA damage response, chromosome stability, chromatin rearrangement, epigenetic reprogramming, and cell cycle are tightly linked to the senescent phenotype. Although senescence increases with age, the real implication of senescence regulation in the progress of aging in humans is largely discussed. In this context, reactive oxygen species (ROS) accumulation has also been postulated to play a critical role in cell homeostasis, aging processes, and contro…

SenescenceDNA damageContext (language use)Biology01 natural sciencesProgeroid syndromesEpigenesis Genetic03 medical and health sciencesDrug DiscoverymedicineAnimalsHumansEpigeneticsCellular Senescence030304 developmental biologyPharmacology0303 health sciencesSyndromeCell cyclemedicine.disease0104 chemical sciencesChromatinCell biology010404 medicinal & biomolecular chemistryOxidative StressReactive Oxygen SpeciesReprogrammingCurrent pharmaceutical design
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The dual role of p53: DNA protection and antioxidant.

2011

The classical functions of p53 protein are those related to its role on DNA damage, cell growth arrest, senescence and apoptosis. For this reason it is called 'the guardian of the genome' and is considered one of the most important players in the development of cancer. However, more recently it has been show that p53 is not only involved in cancer, but also in ageing. p53 is stimulated by stress, which in turn results in the activation of a wide range of transcriptional targets. Low-intensity stress will activate p53 in a manner which results in antioxidant response, thus protecting against ageing because of its antioxidant function. On the contrary, high-intensity activation of p53 will re…

SenescenceGenome instabilityDNA protectionAgingDNA damageBiologymedicine.disease_causeBiochemistryAntioxidantsGenomic InstabilityNeoplasmsmedicineAnimalsHumansCellular SenescenceHeat-Shock ProteinsCell growthCell CycleGeneral MedicineCell cycleCell biologyBiochemistryAgeingTumor Suppressor Protein p53Reactive Oxygen SpeciesOxidative stressFree radical research
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Proteomic analysis reveals a role for Bcl2-associated athanogene 3 and major vault protein in resistance to apoptosis in senescent cells by regulatin…

2014

Senescence is a prominent solid tumor response to therapy in which cells avoid apoptosis and instead enter into prolonged cell cycle arrest. We applied a quantitative proteomics screen to identify signals that lead to therapy-induced senescence and discovered that Bcl2-associated athanogene 3 (Bag3) is up-regulated after adriamycin treatment in MCF7 cells. Bag3 is a member of the BAG family of co-chaperones that interacts with Hsp70. Bag3 also regulates major cell-signaling pathways. Mass spectrometry analysis of the Bag3 Complex revealed a novel interaction between Bag3 and Major Vault Protein (MVP). Silencing of Bag3 or MVP shifts the cellular response to adriamycin to favor apoptosis. We…

SenescenceProteomicsCell cycle checkpointApoptosisBreast NeoplasmsBAG3BiochemistryAnalytical ChemistryMajor vault proteinCell Line TumorGene silencingHumansMolecular BiologyCellular SenescenceAdaptor Proteins Signal TransducingVault Ribonucleoprotein ParticlesMitogen-Activated Protein Kinase 1Antibiotics AntineoplasticMitogen-Activated Protein Kinase 3biologyResearchCell biologyApoptosisDoxorubicinbiology.proteinCancer researchSignal transductionApoptosis Regulatory ProteinsCell agingSignal TransductionMolecularcellular proteomics : MCP
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Histone Variant MacroH2A1 Marks Liver Aging and Orchestrates the Escape from Senescence Induced by DNA Hypomethylation in Hepatocellular Carcinoma

2015

The epigenetic basis of age-associated progression of liver diseases towards hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is unclear. MacroH2A1 is a variant of histone H2A1, present in the two isoforms, with fundamental roles in cell homeostasis. MacroH2A1 is a marker of senescence associated heterochromatic foci (SAHF) and synergizes with DNA demethylating chemotherapic agent 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine (5-aza-dC) in silencing tumor suppressor genes in human fibroblasts. We show that protein levels of macroH2A1 isoforms are increased in the livers of old rodents and humans, and in human HCC tissue. Human HCC cells overexpressing macroH2A1 escape a 5-aza-dC-induced senescent phenotype, as determined by cell p…

SenescencebiologyCell growthCell cycleBiochemistryCell biologyHistoneGeneticsbiology.proteinGene silencingEpigeneticsMolecular BiologyGeneBiotechnologyDNA hypomethylation
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Space of signatures as inverse limits of Carnot groups

2021

We formalize the notion of limit of an inverse system of metric spaces with 1-Lipschitz projections having unbounded fibers. The construction is applied to the sequence of free Carnot groups of fixed rank n and increasing step. In this case, the limit space is in correspondence with the space of signatures of rectifiable paths in ℝn, as introduced by Chen. Hambly-Lyons’s result on the uniqueness of signature implies that this space is a geodesic metric tree. As a particular consequence we deduce that every path in ℝn can be approximated by projections of some geodesics in some Carnot group of rank n, giving an evidence that the complexity of sub-Riemannian geodesics increases with the step.

SequencePure mathematicsControl and OptimizationRank (linear algebra)Geodesic010102 general mathematicsCarnot groupSpace (mathematics)01 natural sciencesComputational Mathematicssymbols.namesakeMetric spaceControl and Systems Engineering0103 physical sciencessymbolsMetric tree010307 mathematical physics0101 mathematicsCarnot cycleMathematicsESAIM: Control, Optimisation and Calculus of Variations
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Phosphorylation of an Overexpressed Yeast Ras2 Protein During the G1 Phase of the Cell Cycle

1994

RAS proteins regulate growth and differentiation in evolutionarily distant systems such as vertebrates and yeast (for reviews, see Tamanoi, 1988; Gibbs and Marshall, 1989; Broach and Deschenes, 1990). At the moleular level, a key function of the yeast RAS1 and RAS2 proteins (collectively referred to as RAS) is to positively regulate the production of cyclic AMP at the onset of the G1 phase of the cell cycle (Toda et al., 1985; De Vendittis et al., 1986). At this stage, RAS proteins are transiently activated by the noncovalent binding of a GTP molecule. Reversal of the effect occurs by the hydrolytic splitting of the ’γ-phosphate of GTP, that leaves a functionally inactive RASGDP complex, th…

SerineCyclin-dependent kinase 1GTP'ChemistryImmunoprecipitationPhosphorylationRas2Cell cycleYeastCell biology
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Web engineering and multi-criterion analisys of modeling languages used in production systems

2010

Abstract Economic globalization and strong, unprecedented, industrial competition, the overwhelming influence of information and communication technology, the Internet and its most important service, i.e. the World Wide Web have an undisputed impact upon all enterprises, exerting a strong influence on the competition system, the accelerated development of new products and services through reducing the development time of the product life cycle, as well as the improvement of upstream and downstream communication with suppliers and customers. Within this framework, taking into account the decline in worldwide economy, especially during the past few years, this paper aims to proposing a new so…

Service (business)Competition (economics)EngineeringProduct lifecycleCommerceInformation and Communications TechnologyModeling languagebusiness.industryThe InternetWeb engineeringbusinessEconomic globalizationIndustrial organizationIFAC Proceedings Volumes
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Economic Allocation in Life Cycle Assessment The State of the Art and Discussion of Examples

2012

Summary This article examines methods for analyzing allocation in life cycle assessment (LCA); it focuses on comparisons of economic allocation with other feasible alternatives. The International Organization for Standardization's (ISO) guideline 14044 indicates that economic allocation should only be used as a last resort, when other methods are not suitable. However, the LCA literature reports several examples of the use of economic allocation. This is due partly to its simplicity and partly to its ability to illustrate the properties of complex systems. Sometimes a price summarizes complex attributes of product or service quality that cannot be easily measured by physical criteria. On th…

Service qualityallocation procedurelife cycle inventory (LCI)ensitivity analysisSettore ING-IND/11 - Fisica Tecnica AmbientaleStandardizationmedia_common.quotation_subjectComplex systemGeneral Social SciencesEnvironmental economicsjoint productionindustrial ecologypartitioningEconomicsOperations managementSimplicityProduct (category theory)Industrial ecologyLow correlationLife-cycle assessmentGeneral Environmental Sciencemedia_common
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Dietary Patterns at the Individual Level through a Nutritional and Environmental Approach: The Case Study of a School Canteen

2022

The public catering sector has important responsibilities in seeking a change toward more sustainable choices for many aspects related to the environmental impacts of their services. The environmental impact of production processes can be studied through life cycle assessment (LCA), which allows a greater awareness of choices and has rarely been applied to catering. In this work, we studied the impacts of two dishes (braised meat and cauliflower meatballs) in a school canteen, their impacts were studied using the daily energy requirement (expressed in kcal) as a functional unit. Global warming potential (GWP) and nonrenewable energy (NRE) were calculated starting from the supply of raw mate…

Settore AGR/03 - Arboricoltura Generale E Coltivazioni ArboreeHealth (social science)school canteenlife cycle assessment (LCA)Plant SciencesustainabilityHealth Professions (miscellaneous)Microbiologynonrenewable energy (NRE)Food Sciencesustainability; school canteen; life cycle assessment (LCA); nonrenewable energy (NRE)
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