23 research outputs found
An exocytoplasmic endonuclease with restriction function in Streptomyces antibioticus.
Streptomyces antibioticus produces a strong endo-DNase which is located between the cytoplasmic membrane and the cell wall. All DNA substrates assayed, including the chromosomal DNA of this species and several bacteriophage DNAs, were completely degraded in vitro by the enzyme. The rate of synthesis of the nuclease depended on the growth medium. In NBG medium, in which the enzyme is not produced, the size of lytic plaques of several actinophages was larger than that in GYM or GAE medium, in which synthesis of the nuclease takes place late in growth. In addition, one of the phages assayed, phi A6, showed a diminution of its efficiency of plating in GYM medium with respect to that in NBG medium; another phage, phi A9, grew in NBG medium but not in the other two media. It is postulated that the presence of the host nuclease, together with the capability of the particular phage to absorb on S. antibioticus of different growth phases, determines the efficiency of growth and the plaque size of the phages on productive media. This hypothesis was confirmed when the growth of phi A6 and phi A9 in a mutant of S. antibioticus lacking the endonuclease activity was analyzed. It is concluded that the enzyme can assume, under some circumstances, a role in in vivo restriction
A novel concept to include uncertainties in the evaluation of stereotactic body radiation therapy after 4D dose accumulation using deformable image registration
Purpose: To use four-dimensional (4D) dose accumulation based on deformable image registration (DIR) to assess dosimetric uncertainty in lung stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) treatment planning. A novel concept, the Evaluation Target Volume (ETV), was introduced to achieve this goal.
Methods: The internal target volume (ITV) approach was used for treatment planning for 11 patients receiving lung SBRT. Retrospectively, 4D dose calculation was done in Pinnacle v9.10. Total dose was accumulated in the reference phase using DIR with MIM. DIR was validated using landmarks introduced by an expert radiation oncologist. The 4D and three-dimensional (3D) dose distributions were compared within the gross tumor volume (GTV) and the planning target volume (PTV) using the D95 and Dmin (calculated as Dmin,0.035cc ) metrics. For lung involvement, the mean dose and V20 , V10 , and V5 were used in the 3D to 4D dose comparison, and Dmax (D0.1cc ) was used for all other organs at risk (OAR). The new evaluation target volume (ETV) was calculated by expanding the GTV in the reference phase in order to include geometrical uncertainties of the DIR, interobserver variability in the definition of the tumor, and uncertainties of imaging and delivery systems. D95 and Dmin,0.035cc metrics were then calculated on the basis of the ETV for 4D accumulated dose distributions, and these metrics were compared with those calculated from the PTV for 3D planned dose distributions.
Results: The target registration error (TRE) per spatial component was below 0.5 ± 2.1mm for all our patients. For five patients, dose degradation above 2% (>4% in 2 patients) was found in the PTV after 4D accumulation and attributed to anatomical variations due to breathing. Comparison of D95 and Dmin,0.035cc metrics showed that the ETV (4D accumulated dose) estimated substantially lower coverage than the PTV (3D planning dose): in six out of the 11 cases, and for at least for one of the two metrics, coverage estimated by ETV was at least 5% lower than that estimated by PTV. Furthermore, the ETV approach revealed hot and cold spots within its boundaries.
Conclusions: A workflow for 4D dose accumulation based on DIR has been devised. Dose degradation was attributed to respiratory motion. To overcome limitations in the PTV for the purposes of evaluating DIR-based 4D accumulated dose distributions, a new concept, the ETV, was proposed. This concept appears to facilitate more reliable dose evaluation and a better understanding of dosimetric uncertainties due to motion and deformation
Intercellular adhesion molecule-1 and vascular cell adhesion molecule are induced by ionizing radiation on lymphatic endothelium
Purpose/Objectives
The goal of this study was to assess the effects of ionizing radiation on the expression of the integrin ligands ICAM-1 and VCAM that control leucocyte transit by lymphatic endothelial cells.
Materials/Methods
Confluent monolayers of primary human lymphatic endothelial cells (LEC) were irradiated with single dose of 2, 5, 10 or 20 Gy, with 6 MeV-x-rays using a Linear-Accelerator. ICAM-1 and VCAM expression was determined by flow cytometry. Human tissue specimens received a single dose of 20 Gy with 15 MeV-x-rays. MC38, B16-OVA or B16-VEGF-C tumors grown in C57BL/6 mice were irradiated with single dose of 20Gy using a Linear-Accelerator fitted with a 10mm Radiosurgery collimator. Clinical samples were obtained from patients previous and 4 weeks after complete standard radiotherapy. ICAM-1 and VCAM expression was detected in all tissue specimens by confocal microscopy. To understand the role of TGFβ in this process anti-TGFβ blocking mAb were injected i.p. 30min before radiotherapy. Cell adhesion to irradiated LEC was analyzed in adhesion experiments performed in the presence or in the absence of anti- TGFβ and /or anti-ICAM1 blocking mAb.
Results
We demonstrate that lymphatic endothelial cells in tumor samples experience induction of surface ICAM-1 and VCAM when exposed to ionizing radiation in a dose- and time-dependent manner. These effects can be recapitulated in cultured LEC, and are in part mediated by TGFβ. These data are consistent with increases in ICAM-1 and VCAM expression on LYVE-1+ endothelial cells in freshly explanted human tumor tissue and in mouse transplanted tumors after radiotherapy. Finally, ICAM-1 and VCAM expression accounts for enhanced adherence of human T lymphocytes to irradiated LEC.
Conclusion
Our results show induction of ICAM-1 and VCAM on LVs in irradiated lesions and offer a starting point for elucidating the biological and therapeutic implications of targeting leukocyte traffic in combination to immunotherapy
Impact of sulfate deprivation and H<sub>2</sub>S exposure on the metabolites of the activated methyl cycle in Chinese cabbage
The activated methyl cycle is a central metabolic pathway used to generate (and recycle) several important sulfur-containing metabolites including methionine, S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) and S-adenosylhomocysteine (SAH) and enable methylation. We have developed a precise and sensitive method for the simultaneous measurement of several sulfur metabolites based on liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) and 34S-metabolic labeling of sulfur-containing metabolites including glutathione and the metabolites of the activated methyl cycle. Sulfate deprivation resulted in a decreased biomass production and content of glutathione, methionine, SAH of both shoot and root, and SAM of the root of Chinese cabbage. Foliarly absorbed H2S may able to replace sulfate taken up by the root as sulfur source for growth and an atmospheric concentration of 0.2 μl l-1 alleviated the decrease in the content of sulfur metabolites. The SAM content of the shoot was hardly affected upon sulfate-deprivation, resulting an increase in the SAM/SAH ratio, indicating a potential higher methylation capacity under this condition
Combined immunotherapy encompassing intratumoral poly-ICLC, dendritic-cell vaccination and radiotherapy in advanced cancer patients
Background: Combination immunotherapy has the potential to achieve additive or synergistic effects. Combined local
injections of dsRNA analogues (mimicking viral RNA) and repeated vaccinations with tumor-lysate loaded dendritic cells shows
efficacy against colon cancer mouse models. In the context of immunotherapy, radiotherapy can exert beneficial abscopal
effects.
Patients and methods: In this two-cohort pilot phase I study, 15 advanced cancer patients received two 4-week cycles of four
intradermal daily doses of monocyte-derived dendritic cells preloaded with autologous tumor lysate and matured for 24 h with
poly-ICLC (Hiltonol), TNF-a and IFN-a. On days þ8 and þ10 of each cycle, patients received intratumoral image-guided 0.25 mg
injections of the dsRNA-analogue Hiltonol. Cyclophosphamide 600 mg/m2 was administered 1 week before. Six patients
received stereotactic ablative radiotherapy (SABR) on selected tumor lesions, including those injected with Hiltonol. Expression
of 25 immune-relevant genes was sequentially monitored by RT-PCR on circulating peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMCs)
and serum concentrations of a cytokine panel were sequentially determined before and during treatment. Pre- and posttreatment PBMC from patients achieving durable stable disease (SD) were studied by IFNc ELISPOT-assays responding to
tumor-lysate loaded DC and by TCRb sequencing.
Results: Combined treatment was, safe and well tolerated. One heavily pretreated castration-resistant prostate cancer patient
experienced a remarkable mixed abscopal response to SABRþ immunotherapy. No objective responses were observed, while
nine patients presented SD (five of them in the six-patient radiotherapy cohort). Intratumoral Hiltonol increased IFN-b and IFN-a
mRNA in circulating PBMC. DC vaccination increased serum IL-12 and IL-1b concentrations, especially in patients presenting SD.
IFNc-ELISPOT reactivity to tumor lysates was observed in two patients experiencing durable SD.
Conclusions: This radio-immunotherapy combination strategy, aimed at resembling viral infection in tumor tissue in
combination with a dendritic-cell vaccine and SABR, is safe and shows immune-associated activity and signs of preliminary
clinical efficacy