33 research outputs found

    Collateral fattening in body composition autoregulation: its determinants and significance for obesity predisposition

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    Collateral fattening refers to the process whereby excess fat is deposited as a result of the body’s attempt to counter a deficit in lean mass through overeating. Its demonstration and significance to weight regulation and obesity can be traced to work on energy budget strategies in growing mammals and birds, and to men recovering from experimental starvation. The cardinal features of collateral fattening rests upon (i) the existence of a feedback system between lean tissue and appetite control, with lean tissue deficit driving hyperphagia, and (ii) upon the occurrence of a temporal desynchronization in the recovery of body composition, with complete recovery of fat mass preceeding that of lean mass. Under these conditions, persistent hyperphagia driven by the need to complete the recovery of lean tissue will result in the excess fat deposition (hence collateral fattening) and fat overshooting. After reviewing the main lines of evidence for the phenomenon of collateral fattening in body composition autoregulation, this article discusses the causes and determinants of the desynchronization in fat and lean tissue recovery leading to collateral fattening and fat overshooting, and points to their significance in the mechanisms by which dieting, developmental programming and sedentariness predispose to obesity

    Matrix Metalloproteinase-Induced Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition in Breast Cancer

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    Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) degrade and modify the extracellular matrix (ECM) as well as cell-ECM and cell-cell contacts, facilitating detachment of epithelial cells from the surrounding tissue. MMPs play key functions in embryonic development and mammary gland branching morphogenesis, but they are also upregulated in breast cancer, where they stimulate tumorigenesis, cancer cell invasion and metastasis. MMPs have been investigated as potential targets for cancer therapy, but clinical trials using broad-spectrum MMP inhibitors yielded disappointing results, due in part to lack of specificity toward individual MMPs and specific stages of tumor development. Epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) is a developmental process in which epithelial cells take on the characteristics of invasive mesenchymal cells, and activation of EMT has been implicated in tumor progression. Recent findings have implicated MMPs as promoters and mediators of developmental and pathogenic EMT processes in the breast. In this review, we will summarize recent studies showing how MMPs activate EMT in mammary gland development and in breast cancer, and how MMPs mediate breast cancer cell motility, invasion, and EMT-driven breast cancer progression. We also suggest approaches to inhibit these MMP-mediated malignant processes for therapeutic benefit

    A 2a adenosine receptor: Structures, modeling, and medicinal chemistry

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    Many selective agonists and antagonists of the A 2A adenosine receptor (AR) have been reported, while allosteric modulators specific for this receptor are still needed. Many heterocyclic chemotypes have been discovered as A 2A AR antagonists, while most of the known AR agonists are nucleosides or 3,5-dicyanopyridine derivatives. A few A 2A AR ligands have been in clinical trials as antihypertensives, anti-inflammatory or diagnostic compounds (agonists), and as drugs for treating Parkinson’s disease and cancer (antagonists). The A 2A AR has become one of the most widely investigated G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) structures using X-ray crystallography and also biophysical techniques such as NMR. Thus, the design of agonists, antagonists, and allosteric modulators has become structure-based, with numerous examples of in silico approaches, including virtual ligand screening (VLS), leading to the discovery of both novel agonists and antagonists
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