147 research outputs found
«De la part d’un ami sans visage». Agostino J. Sinadino (1876-1956), un poète sans profil: Correspondance inédite avec André Gide
L’idéal de transparence documentaire se heurte, dans le cas du poète Agostino J. Sinadino, à une irréductible opacité. Depuis les quelques pages de présentation que Gian Pietro Lucini lui consacrait dans Il verso libero (1908), où Sinadino – décrit tour à tour comme un personnage de conte fantastique atteint d’une douce folie, un esthète menant une vie de bohème, un aventurier lancé sur les traces de Rimbaud, le résultat d’un croisement discutable entre Salomé et un prince des Mille et une nu..
El Zapato de raso /de Paul Claudel ; versión de Antonio Gala
De cada obra s'ha digitalitzat un programa sencer. De la resta s'han digitalitzat les parts que són diferents.Dedicat al pintor José María Sert. Música d'Arthur HonneggerDirecció escènica: José Luis AlonsoEmpresa: Juan A. Pamia
The PPARα agonist fenofibrate suppresses B-cell lymphoma in mice by modulating lipid metabolism
AbstractObesity is associated with an increased risk for malignant lymphoma development. We used Bcr/Abl transformed B cells to determine the impact of aggressive lymphoma formation on systemic lipid mobilization and turnover. In wild-type mice, tumor size significantly correlated with depletion of white adipose tissues (WAT), resulting in increased serum free fatty acid (FFA) concentrations which promote B-cell proliferation in vitro. Moreover, B-cell tumor development induced hepatic lipid accumulation due to enhanced hepatic fatty acid (FA) uptake and impaired FA oxidation. Serum triglyceride, FFA, phospholipid and cholesterol levels were significantly elevated. Consistently, serum VLDL/LDL-cholesterol and apolipoprotein B levels were drastically increased. These findings suggest that B-cell tumors trigger systemic lipid mobilization from WAT to the liver and increase VLDL/LDL release from the liver to promote tumor growth. Further support for this concept stems from experiments where we used the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor α (PPARα) agonist and lipid-lowering drug fenofibrate that significantly suppressed tumor growth independent of angiogenesis and inflammation. In addition to WAT depletion, fenofibrate further stimulated FFA uptake by the liver and restored hepatic FA oxidation capacity, thereby accelerating the clearance of lipids released from WAT. Furthermore, fenofibrate blocked hepatic lipid release induced by the tumors. In contrast, lipid utilization in the tumor tissue itself was not increased by fenofibrate which correlates with extremely low expression levels of PPARα in B-cells. Our data show that fenofibrate associated effects on hepatic lipid metabolism and deprivation of serum lipids are capable to suppress B-cell lymphoma growth which may direct novel treatment strategies. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Lipid Metabolism in Cancer
The Complete Genome Sequence of Fibrobacter succinogenes S85 Reveals a Cellulolytic and Metabolic Specialist
Fibrobacter succinogenes is an important member of the rumen
microbial community that converts plant biomass into nutrients usable by its
host. This bacterium, which is also one of only two cultivated species in its
phylum, is an efficient and prolific degrader of cellulose. Specifically, it has
a particularly high activity against crystalline cellulose that requires close
physical contact with this substrate. However, unlike other known cellulolytic
microbes, it does not degrade cellulose using a cellulosome or by producing high
extracellular titers of cellulase enzymes. To better understand the biology of
F. succinogenes, we sequenced the genome of the type strain
S85 to completion. A total of 3,085 open reading frames were predicted from its
3.84 Mbp genome. Analysis of sequences predicted to encode for
carbohydrate-degrading enzymes revealed an unusually high number of genes that
were classified into 49 different families of glycoside hydrolases, carbohydrate
binding modules (CBMs), carbohydrate esterases, and polysaccharide lyases. Of
the 31 identified cellulases, none contain CBMs in families 1, 2, and 3,
typically associated with crystalline cellulose degradation. Polysaccharide
hydrolysis and utilization assays showed that F. succinogenes
was able to hydrolyze a number of polysaccharides, but could only utilize the
hydrolytic products of cellulose. This suggests that F.
succinogenes uses its array of hemicellulose-degrading enzymes to
remove hemicelluloses to gain access to cellulose. This is reflected in its
genome, as F. succinogenes lacks many of the genes necessary to
transport and metabolize the hydrolytic products of non-cellulose
polysaccharides. The F. succinogenes genome reveals a bacterium
that specializes in cellulose as its sole energy source, and provides insight
into a novel strategy for cellulose degradation
- …