145 research outputs found
Optimized submerged batch fermentation strategy for systems scale studies of metabolic switching in Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2)
Background: Systems biology approaches to study metabolic switching in Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) depend on
cultivation conditions ensuring high reproducibility and distinct phases of culture growth and secondary metabolite
production. In addition, biomass concentrations must be sufficiently high to allow for extensive time-series
sampling before occurrence of a given nutrient depletion for transition triggering. The present study describes for
the first time the development of a dedicated optimized submerged batch fermentation strategy as the basis for
highly time-resolved systems biology studies of metabolic switching in S. coelicolor A3(2).
Results: By a step-wise approach, cultivation conditions and two fully defined cultivation media were developed and
evaluated using strain M145 of S. coelicolor A3(2), providing a high degree of cultivation reproducibility and enabling
reliable studies of the effect of phosphate depletion and L-glutamate depletion on the metabolic transition to antibiotic
production phase. Interestingly, both of the two carbon sources provided, D-glucose and L-glutamate, were found to be
necessary in order to maintain high growth rates and prevent secondary metabolite production before nutrient
depletion. Comparative analysis of batch cultivations with (i) both L-glutamate and D-glucose in excess, (ii) L-glutamate
depletion and D-glucose in excess, (iii) L-glutamate as the sole source of carbon and (iv) D-glucose as the sole source of
carbon, reveal a complex interplay of the two carbon sources in the bacterium's central carbon metabolism.
Conclusions: The present study presents for the first time a dedicated cultivation strategy fulfilling the requirements for
systems biology studies of metabolic switching in S. coelicolor A3(2). Key results from labelling and cultivation
experiments on either or both of the two carbon sources provided indicate that in the presence of D-glucose,
L-glutamate was the preferred carbon source, while D-glucose alone appeared incapable of maintaining culture growth,
likely due to a metabolic bottleneck at the oxidation of pyruvate to acetyl-CoA
Biological control of Botrytis cinerea and plant growth promotion potential by Penicillium citrinum in chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.)
A total of 48 fungi were characterised for their antagonistic potential against
Botrytis cinerea causing Botrytis Gray Mold (BGM) disease in chickpea by dual
culture and metabolite production assays. The culture filtrate of the most
promising isolate, VFI-51, was purified by various chromatographic techniques
and identified as ‘citrinin’ by nuclear magnetic resonance and mass spectrometry
studies. The efficacy of citrinin was demonstrated to control BGM in chickpea
under greenhouse conditions. The sequences of 18S rDNA gene of the VFI-51
matched with Penicillium citrinum in BLAST analysis. The VFI-51 produced
siderophore, hydrocyanic acid, indole-3-acetic acid, lipase, protease and β-1,3-
glucanase; grew well in NaCl (up to 15%), at pH between 7 and 11 and
temperatures between 20°C and 40°C; and was compatible with fungicides
bavistin and thiram. Under greenhouse and field conditions, VFI-51 significantly
enhanced the nodule number, nodule weight, root and shoot weight and stover
and grain yield over the un-inoculated control. In the rhizosphere, VFI-51 also
significantly enhanced total N, available P and OC over the un-inoculated control.
Scanning electron microscopy analysis revealed that VFI-51 colonised on the
roots of chickpea. This study concluded that VFI-51 has the potential for
biocontrol of BGM and plant growth promotion in chickpea
CDH11 Expression is Associated with Survival in Patients with Osteosarcoma
Previous studies have shown that cadherin-11 (CDH11) may be involved in the
metastatic process of osteosarcoma. The correlation of the expression levels of
CDH11 in osteosarcoma samples with the risk of disease progression and metastasis
was examined. Real time qRT-PCR was used to quantify CDH11 expression in a set of
newly established osteosarcoma cell lines, 11 primaries and five metastases,
compared to the levels in 12 normal osteoblast cell lines established from
healthy bone, and also in a set of 10 snap-frozen osteosarcoma samples. In all
cases long term clinical follow-up data was available. The CDH11 expression level
decreased gradually from the osteoblast to the primary cell lines (p=0.2184) and
further to those established from the tumor metastases (p=0.0275). Importantly,
the level of CDH11 expression correlated significantly (p=0.01) with patient
survival (Kaplan-Meier survival analysis) in both sample sets (p=0.0128 for the
cell lines, p=0.0492 for the biopsies). In conclusion, the results indicate that
CDH11 may be useful as a prognostic marker of disease progression and survival in
osteosarcoma
Serum TCA cycle metabolites in Lewy bodies dementia and Alzheimer's disease: Network analysis and cognitive prognosis
Se han documentado anomalÃas en el ciclo del ácido tricarboxÃlico (TCA) en la demencia. A través del análisis de redes, los metabolitos del ciclo TCA podrÃan reflejar indirectamente anomalÃas conocidas relacionadas con la demencia en las vÃas bioquÃmicas, y los metabolitos clave podrÃan estar asociados con el pronóstico. Este estudio analizó los metabolitos del ciclo de TCA como predictores del deterioro cognitivo en una cohorte de demencia leve y exploró las posibles interacciones con el diagnóstico de demencia con cuerpos de Lewy (LBD) o enfermedad de Alzheimer (EA) y el genotipo APOE-ε4. Se incluyeron 145 pacientes con demencia leve (LBD = 59; AD = 86). Los metabolitos del ciclo de TCA en suero se analizaron al inicio del estudio y se realizaron redes de correlación parcial. El rendimiento cognitivo se midió anualmente durante 5 años con el Mini-examen del estado mental. Los modelos Tobit de efectos mixtos longitudinales evaluaron cada metabolito de referencia como predictor del deterioro cognitivo a los 5 años. Se exploraron las interacciones APOE-ε4 y de diagnóstico. Los resultados mostraron concentraciones de metabolitos comparables en LBD y AD. Las redes corregidas de pruebas múltiples mostraron coeficientes más grandes para una correlación negativa entre piruvato-succinato y correlaciones positivas entre fumarato-malato y citrato-isocitrato tanto en LBD como en AD. En la muestra total, los modelos mixtos ajustados mostraron asociaciones significativas entre la concentración inicial de citrato y las puntuaciones longitudinales del MMSE. En los portadores de APOE-ε4, el isocitrato inicial predijo las puntuaciones del MMSE. Concluimos que, en la demencia leve, las concentraciones de citrato sérico podrÃan estar asociadas con el deterioro cognitivo posterior, asà como las concentraciones de isocitrato en los portadores de APOE-ε4. La regulación a la baja de la actividad enzimática en la primera mitad del ciclo TCA (deshidrogenasas descarboxiladoras), con regulación al alza en la segunda mitad (solo deshidrogenasas), podrÃa reflejarse indirectamente en las redes de metabolitos del ciclo TCA sérico.Q2Abnormalities in the Tri-Carboxylic-Acid (TCA) cycle have been documented in dementia. Through network analysis, TCA cycle metabolites could indirectly reflect known dementia-related abnormalities in biochemical pathways, and key metabolites might be associated with prognosis. This study analyzed TCA cycle metabolites as predictors of cognitive decline in a mild dementia cohort and explored potential interactions with the diagnosis of Lewy Body Dementia (LBD) or Alzheimer's Disease (AD) and APOE-ε4 genotype. We included 145 mild dementia patients (LBD = 59; AD = 86). Serum TCA cycle metabolites were analyzed at baseline, and partial correlation networks were conducted. Cognitive performance was measured annually over 5-years with the Mini-mental State Examination. Longitudinal mixed-effects Tobit models evaluated each baseline metabolite as a predictor of 5-year cognitive decline. APOE-ε4 and diagnostic interactions were explored. Results showed comparable metabolite concentrations in LBD and AD. Multiple testing corrected networks showed larger coefficients for a negative correlation between pyruvate – succinate and positive correlations between fumarate – malate and citrate – Isocitrate in both LBD and AD. In the total sample, adjusted mixed models showed significant associations between baseline citrate concentration and longitudinal MMSE scores. In APOE-ε4 carriers, baseline isocitrate predicted MMSE scores. We conclude that, in mild dementia, serum citrate concentrations could be associated with subsequent cognitive decline, as well as isocitrate concentrations in APOE-ε4 carriers. Downregulation of enzymatic activity in the first half of the TCA cycle (decarboxylating dehydrogenases), with upregulation in the latter half (dehydrogenases only), might be indirectly reflected in serum TCA cycle metabolites' networks.https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5832-0603https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=MrICwaMAAAAJ&hl=enhttps://scienti.minciencias.gov.co/cvlac/visualizador/generarCurriculoCv.do?cod_rh=0001429659Revista Internacional - IndexadaS
Investigation of an Escherichia coli O145 outbreak in a child day-care centre - extensive sampling and characterization of eae- and stx1-positive E. coli yields epidemiological and socioeconomic insight
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>On October 29<sup>th </sup>2009 the health authorities in the city of Trondheim, Norway were alerted about a case of Shiga toxin-positive <it>E. coli </it>(STEC) O145 in a child with bloody diarrhoea attending a day-care centre. Symptomatic children in this day-care centre were sampled, thereby identifying three more cases. This initiated an outbreak investigation.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A case was defined as a child attending the day-care centre, in whom <it>eae- </it>and <it>stx</it><sub>1</sub>- but not <it>stx</it><sub>2</sub>-positive <it>E. coli </it>O145:H28 was diagnosed from a faecal sample, with multilocus variable number of tandem repeat analysis (MLVA) profile identical to the index isolate. All 61 children, a staff of 14 in the day-care centre, and 74 close contacts submitted faecal samples. Staff and parents were interviewed about cases' exposure to foods and animals. Faecal samples from 31 ewes from a sheep herd to which the children were exposed were analyzed for <it>E. coli </it>O145.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Sixteen cases were identified, from which nine presented diarrhoea but not haemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS). The attack rate was 0.26, and varied between age groups (0.13-0.40) and between the three day-care centre departments (0.20-0.50), and was significantly higher amongst the youngest children. Median duration of shedding was 20 days (0-71 days). Children were excluded from the day-care centre during shedding, requiring parents to take compassionate leave, estimated to be a minimum total of 406 days for all cases. Atypical enteropathogenic <it>E. coli </it>(aEPEC) were detected among 14 children other than cases. These isolates were genotypically different from the outbreak strain. Children in the day-care centre were exposed to faecal pollution from a sheep herd, but <it>E. coli </it>O145 was not detected in the sheep.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>We report an outbreak of <it>stx</it><sub>1</sub>- and <it>eae-</it>positive STEC O145:H28 infection with mild symptoms among children in a day-care centre. Extensive sampling showed occurrence of the outbreak strain as well as other STEC and aEPEC strains in the outbreak population. MLVA-typing of the STEC-isolates strongly indicates a common source of infection. The study describes epidemiological aspects and socioeconomic consequences of a non-O157 STEC outbreak, which are less commonly reported than O157 outbreaks.</p
Stereotactic body radiotherapy for organ-confined prostate cancer
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Improved understanding of prostate cancer radiobiology combined with advances in delivery of radiation to the moving prostate offer the potential to reduce treatment-related morbidity and maintain quality of life (QOL) following prostate cancer treatment. We present preliminary results following stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) treatment for organ-confined prostate cancer.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>SBRT was performed on 304 patients with clinically localized prostate cancer: 50 received 5 fractions of 7 Gy (total dose 35 Gy) and 254 received 5 fractions of 7.25 Gy (total dose 36.25 Gy). Acute and late toxicity was assessed using the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group scale. The Expanded Prostate Cancer Index Composite questionnaire was used to assess QOL. Prostate-specific antigen response was monitored.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>At a median 30-month (26 - 37 month, range) follow-up there were no biochemical failures for the 35-Gy dose level. Acute Grade II urinary and rectal toxicities occurred in 4% of patients with no higher Grade acute toxicities. One Grade II late urinary toxicity occurred with no other Grade II or higher late toxicities. At a median 17-month (8 - 27 month, range) follow-up the 36.25 Gy dose level had 2 low- and 2 high-risk patients fail biochemically (biopsy showed 2 low- and 1 high-risk patients were disease-free in the gland). Acute Grade II urinary and rectal toxicities occurred in 4.7% (12/253) and 3.6% (9/253) of patients, respectively. For those patients with a minimum of 12 months follow-up, 5.8% (12/206) had late Grade II urinary toxicity and 2.9% (6/206) had late Grade II rectal toxicities. One late Grade III urinary toxicity occurred; no Grade IV toxicities occurred. For both dose levels at 17 months, bowel and urinary QOL returned to baseline values; sexual QOL decreased by 10%.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The low toxicity and maintained QOL are highly encouraging. Additional follow-up is needed to determine long-term biochemical control and maintenance of low toxicity and QOL.</p
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