185 research outputs found
Baseline chest computed tomography as standard of care in high-risk hematology patients
Baseline chest computed tomography (BCT) in high-risk hematology patients allows for the early diagnosis of invasive pulmonary aspergillosis (IPA). The distribution of BCT implementation in hematology departments and impact on outcome is unknown. A web-based questionnaire was designed. International scientific bodies were invited. The estimated numbers of annually treated hematology patients, chest imaging timepoints and techniques, IPA rates, and follow-up imaging were assessed. In total, 142 physicians from 43 countries participated. The specialties included infectious diseases (n = 69; 49%), hematology (n = 68; 48%), and others (n = 41; 29%). BCT was performed in 57% (n = 54) of 92 hospitals. Upon the diagnosis of malignancy or admission, 48% and 24% performed BCT, respectively, and X-ray was performed in 48% and 69%, respectively. BCT was more often used in hematopoietic cell transplantation and in relapsed acute leukemia. European centers performed BCT in 59% and non-European centers in 53%. Median estimated IPA rate was 8% and did not differ between BCT (9%; IQR 5-15%) and non-BCT centers (7%; IQR 5-10%) (p = 0.69). Follow-up computed tomography (CT) for IPA was performed in 98% (n = 90) of centers. In high-risk hematology patients, baseline CT is becoming a standard-of-care. Chest X-ray, while inferior, is still widely used. Randomized, controlled trials are needed to investigate the impact of BCT on patient outcome
Predicting gene promoter methylation in non-small-cell lung cancer by evaluating sputum and serum
The use of 5-methylcytosine demethylating agents in conjunction with inhibitors of histone deacetylation may offer a new therapeutic strategy for lung cancer. Monitoring the efficacy of gene demethylating treatment directly within the tumour may be difficult due to tumour location. This study determined the positive and negative predictive values of sputum and serum for detecting gene methylation in primary lung cancer. A panel of eight genes was evaluated by comparing methylation detected in the primary tumour biopsy to serum and sputum obtained from 72 patients with Stage III lung cancer. The prevalence for methylation of the eight genes in sputum (21–43%) approximated to that seen in tumours, but was 0.7–4.3-fold greater than detected in serum. Sputum was superior to serum in classifying the methylation status of genes in the tumour biopsy. The positive predictive value of the top four genes (p16, DAPK, PAX5 β, and GATA5) was 44–72% with a negative predictive value for these genes ⩾70%. The highest specificity was seen for the p16 gene, and this was associated with a odds ratio of six for methylation in the tumour when this gene was methylated in sputum. In contrast, for serum, the individual sensitivity for all genes was 6–27%. Evaluating the combined effect of methylation of at least one of the four most significant genes in sputum increased the positive predictive value to 86%. These studies demonstrate that sputum can be used effectively as a surrogate for tumour tissue to predict the methylation status of advanced lung cancer where biopsy is not feasible
New species in Aspergillus section Terrei
Section Terrei of Aspergillus was studied using a polyphasic approach including sequence analysis of parts of the β-tubulin and calmodulin genes and the ITS region, macro- and micromorphological analyses and examination of extrolite profiles to describe three new species in this section. Based on phylogenetic analysis of calmodulin and β-tubulin sequences seven lineages were observed among isolates that have previously been treated as A. terreus and its subspecies by Raper & Fennell (1965) and others. Aspergillus alabamensis, A. terreus var. floccosus, A. terreus var. africanus, A. terreus var. aureus, A. hortai and A. terreus NRRL 4017 all represent distinct lineages from the A. terreus clade. Among them, A. terreus var. floccosus, A. terreus NRRL 4017 and A. terreus var. aureus could also be distinguished from A. terreus by using ITS sequence data. New names are proposed for A. terreus var. floccosus, A. terreus var. africanus, A. terreus var. aureus, while Aspergillus hortai is recognised at species level. Aspergillus terreus NRRL 4017 is described as the new species A. pseudoterreus. Also included in section Terrei are some species formerly placed in sections Flavipedes and Versicolores. A. clade including the type isolate of A. niveus (CBS 115.27) constitutes a lineage closely related to A. carneus. Fennellia nivea, the hypothesized teleomorph is not related to this clade. Aspergillus allahabadii, A. niveus var. indicus, and two species originally placed in section Versicolores, A. ambiguus and A. microcysticus, also form well-defined lineages on all trees. Species in Aspergillus section Terrei are producers of a diverse array of secondary metabolites. However, many of the species in the section produce different combinations of the following metabolites: acetylaranotin, asperphenamate, aspochalamins, aspulvinones, asteltoxin, asterric acid, asterriquinones, aszonalenins, atrovenetins, butyrolactones, citreoisocoumarins, citreoviridins, citrinins, decaturins, fulvic acid, geodins, gregatins, mevinolins, serantrypinone, terreic acid (only the precursor 3,6-dihydroxytoluquinone found), terreins, terrequinones, terretonins and territrems. The cholesterol-lowering agent mevinolin was found in A. terreus and A. neoafricanus only. The hepatotoxic extrolite citrinin was found in eight species: A. alabamensis, A. allahabadii, A. carneus, A. floccosus, A. hortai, A. neoindicus, A. niveus and A. pseudoterreus. The neurotoxic extrolite citreoviridin was found in five species: A. neoafricanus, A. aureoterreus, A. pseudoterreus, A. terreus and A. neoniveus. Territrems, tremorgenic extrolites, were found in some strains of A. alabamensis and A. terreus
Serum Fetuin-A Associates with Type 2 Diabetes and Insulin Resistance in Chinese Adults
Previous studies have demonstrated that fetuin-A is related to insulin resistance among subjects with normal glucose tolerance but not patients with type 2 diabetes. There are limited data available concerning fetuin-A and insulin resistance in Chinese. We aimed to study the association of fetuin-A with insulin resistance among participants with or without type 2 diabetes in a large sample size of adults aged 40 and older.A community-based cross-sectional study was performed among 5,227 Chinese adults. The average age of our study was 61.5±9.9 years. Serum fetuin-A concentrations were not significantly different between male and female (296.9 vs. 292.9 mg/l, p = 0.11). Compared with the lowest quartile, the highest quartile of serum fetuin-A revealed a significant higher proportion of type 2 diabetic patients (34.8% vs. 27.3%, p<0.0001). In the multinomial logit models, the risk of type 2 diabetes was associated with each one quartile increase of serum fetuin-A concentrations when referenced not only to normal glucose tolerance (OR 1.24, 95% CI 1.07-1.43, p = 0.004) but also to impaired glucose regulation (OR 1.25, 95% CI 1.08-1.44, p = 0.003, respectively), after adjustment for age, sex, community, current smoking, and current drinking. The logistic regression analysis showed that fetuin-A were associated with elevated HOMA-IR and fasting serum insulin both among the participants with or without type 2 diabetes in the full adjusted analysis. There was no significant association between elevated serum fetuin-A concentrations and impaired glucose regulation (all p≥0.12).Higher fetuin-A concentrations were associated with type 2 diabetes and insulin resistance in middle aged and elderly Chinese
Recommended from our members
Targeting the Creatine Kinase Pathway in EVI1-Positive Acute Myeloid Leukemia
Abnormal expression of the transcription factor EVI1 through chromosome 3q26 rearrangements has been implicated in the development of one of the most therapeutically challenging high-risk subtypes of acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Here we integrated genomic and metabolic screening of hematopoietic stem cells to reveal that EVI1 overexpression altered cellular metabolism. A pooled shRNA screen targeting metabolic enzymes identified the ATP-buffering, mitochondrial creatine kinase CKMT1 as a druggable dependency in EVI1-positive AML.
Of 18 screened AML cell lines harboring various genetic alterations, only the four EVI1-expressing lines exhibited markedly elevated CKMT1 protein expression and activity. Treatment of this cell line panel with either CKMT1-targeting shRNAs or cyclocreatine, an analog of the CKMT1 substrate creatine and inhibitor of the creatine biosynthesis pathway, showed that elevated CKMT1 protein expression correlated with sensitivity to CKMT1 pathway inhibition. Consistent with these data, flow cytometry analysis of a panel of 68 unselected primary AML patient specimens revealed that the four leukemias with the highest levels of EVI1 expression also had elevated CKMT1 protein levels and enhanced sensitivity to cyclocreatine treatment.
We next established that enforced EVI1 expression increased CKMT1 protein and mRNA levels and that three independent shRNA molecules targeting EVI1 drastically reduced CKMT1 expression in two EVI1-positive AML cell lines. A luciferase-based reporter system established that RUNX1 represses CKMT1 expression through direct binding to its promoter. ChIP-qPCR approaches were then applied to dissect the sequential events involved in EVI1-induced CKMT1 upregulation and the possible role of RUNX1 as an intermediate. In both primary AML samples and cell lines, we determined that EVI1 represses RUNX1 expression by directly binding to its promoter. This, in turn, eliminates repressive RUNX1 binding at the CKMT1 promoter and thereby promotes CKMT1 expression. Based on these data, we explored the relationship between EVI1 and RUNX1 expression with CKMT1 mRNA levels in two AML transcriptional datasets (GSE14468 and GSE10358). We divided these cohorts into four subgroups with high versus low expression of EVI1 and RUNX1. Consistent with our mechanistic analysis, primary AML samples within the EVI1high/RUNX1low subgroup were significantly more likely to express high levels of CKMT1 than AML samples in the other three subgroups.
CKMT1 promotes the metabolism of arginine to creatinine. To determine the effect of CKMT1 suppression on this pathway, we measured the metabolic flux of stable-isotope labeled L-arginine 13C6 through creatine synthesis using mass spectrometry. CKMT1-directed shRNAs or cyclocreatine selectively decreased intracellular phospho-creatine and blocked production of ATP by mitochondria. Salvage of the creatine pathway by exogenous phospho-creatine restored normal mitochondrial function, prevented the loss of viability of human EVI1-positive AML cells induced by cyclocreatine or CKMT1-directed shRNAs, and maintained the serial replating activity of Evi1-transformed bone marrow cells.
Primary human EVI1-positive AML is frequently associated with somatic NRAS mutations. Thus, to investigate whether EVI1 over-expression sensitizes primary AMLs to CKMT1 inhibition in vivo, we transplanted primary NrasG12D mutant AMLs with and without elevated Evi1 expression into congenic recipient mice. In this system, Ckmt1 knockdown did not significantly alter the outgrowth of control Nras mutant AML cells compared to a shControl (63% versus 71%). By contrast, NrasG12D AML cells characterized by elevated Evi1 expression were profoundly depleted by Ckmt1 suppression to 2% versus 58% in shControl recipients. Consistent with these results, pharmacologic or genetic inhibition of the CKMT1-dependent pathway blocked disease progression and prolonged the survival of mice injected with human EVI1-positive cells but not with EVI1-negative cells, without noticeable cytotoxic effect on normal murine cells.
In conclusion, we have integrated "omic" approaches to identify CKMT1 as a druggable liability in EVI-positive AML. This study supports a potential therapeutic avenue for targeting the creatine kinase pathway in EVI1-positive AML, which remains one of the worst outcome subtypes of AML
A stabilized glycomimetic conjugate vaccine inducing protective antibodies against Neisseria meningitidis serogroup A
Neisseria meningitidis serogroup A capsular polysaccharide (MenA CPS) consists of (1 → 6)-2-acetamido-2-deoxy-α-D-mannopyranosyl phosphate repeating units, O-acetylated at position C3 or C4. Glycomimetics appear attractive to overcome the CPS intrinsic lability in physiological media, due to cleavage of the phosphodiester bridge, and to develop a stable vaccine with longer shelf life in liquid formulation. Here, we generate a series of non-acetylated carbaMenA oligomers which are proven more stable than the CPS. An octamer (DP8) inhibits the binding of a MenA specific bactericidal mAb and polyclonal serum to the CPS, and is selected for further in vivo testing. However, its CRM197 conjugate raises murine antibodies towards the non-acetylated CPS backbone, but not the natural acetylated form. Accordingly, random O-acetylation of the DP8 is performed, resulting in a structure (Ac-carbaMenA) showing improved inhibition of anti-MenA CPS antibody binding and, after conjugation to CRM197, eliciting anti-MenA protective murine antibodies, comparably to the vaccine benchmark.Bio-organic Synthesi
Acadesine Kills Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia (CML) Cells through PKC-Dependent Induction of Autophagic Cell Death
CML is an hematopoietic stem cell disease characterized by the t(9;22) (q34;q11) translocation encoding the oncoprotein p210BCR-ABL. The effect of acadesine (AICAR, 5-Aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide-1-β-D-ribofuranoside) a compound with known antileukemic effect on B cell chronic lymphoblastic leukemia (B-CLL) was investigated in different CML cell lines. Acadesine triggered loss of cell metabolism in K562, LAMA-84 and JURL-MK1 and was also effective in killing imatinib-resistant K562 cells and Ba/F3 cells carrying the T315I-BCR-ABL mutation. The anti-leukemic effect of acadesine did not involve apoptosis but required rather induction of autophagic cell death. AMPK knock-down by Sh-RNA failed to prevent the effect of acadesine, indicating an AMPK-independent mechanism. The effect of acadesine was abrogated by GF109203X and Ro-32-0432, both inhibitor of classical and new PKCs and accordingly, acadesine triggered relocation and activation of several PKC isoforms in K562 cells. In addition, this compound exhibited a potent anti-leukemic effect in clonogenic assays of CML cells in methyl cellulose and in a xenograft model of K562 cells in nude mice. In conclusion, our work identifies an original and unexpected mechanism by which acadesine triggers autophagic cell death through PKC activation. Therefore, in addition to its promising effects in B-CLL, acadesine might also be beneficial for Imatinib-resistant CML patients
- …