40 research outputs found

    The effects of quercetin on SW480 human colon carcinoma cells: a proteomic study

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    BACKGROUND: High fruit and vegetable intake is known to reduce the risk of colon cancer. To improve understanding of this phenomenon the action of different phytochemicals on colon cells has been examined. One such compound is quercetin that belongs to the group known as flavonoids. The purpose of this study was to determine the influence of quercetin on the proteome of the SW480 human colon adenocarcinoma cell line, specifically to identify proteins that could be the molecular targets of quercetin in its amelioration of the progression of colon cancer. To this end, two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry were used to identify proteins that underwent a change in expression following treatment of the cells with 20 μM quercetin. This could elucidate how quercetin may reduce the progression of colon cancer. RESULTS: Quercetin treatment of the SW480 human colon cancer cells was found to result in the decreased expression of three proteins and the increased expression of one protein. The identified proteins with decreased expression were type II cytoskeletal 8 keratin and NADH dehydrogenase Fe-S protein 3. The other protein with decreased expression was not identified. The protein with increased expression belonged to the annexin family. CONCLUSION: Several proteins were determined to have altered expression following treatment with quercetin. Such changes in the levels of these particular proteins could underlie the chemo-protective action of quercetin towards colon cancer

    Socio-Demographic Patterning of Physical Activity across Migrant Groups in India: Results from the Indian Migration Study

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    OBJECTIVE: To investigate the relationship between rural to urban migration and physical activity (PA) in India. METHODS: 6,447 (42% women) participants comprising 2077 rural, 2,094 migrants and 2,276 urban were recruited. Total activity (MET hr/day), activity intensity (min/day), PA Level (PAL) television viewing and sleeping (min/day) were estimated and associations with migrant status examined, adjusting for the sib-pair design, age, site, occupation, education, and socio-economic position (SEP). RESULTS: Total activity was highest in rural men whereas migrant and urban men had broadly similar activity levels (p<0.001). Women showed similar patterns, but slightly lower levels of total activity. Sedentary behaviour and television viewing were lower in rural residents and similar in migrant and urban groups. Sleep duration was highest in the rural group and lowest in urban non-migrants. Migrant men had considerably lower odds of being in the highest quartile of total activity than rural men, a finding that persisted after adjustment for age, SEP and education (OR 0.53, 95% CI 0.37, 0.74). For women, odds ratios attenuated and associations were removed after adjusting for age, SEP and education. CONCLUSION: Our findings suggest that migrants have already acquired PA levels that closely resemble long-term urban residents. Effective public health interventions to increase PA are needed

    An overview on different strategies for the stemness maintenance of MSCs

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    Recent evidence suggests that mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have promising therapeutic potential for a broad range of diseases. Because the percentage of MSCs obtained from tissues is very low for cell therapy applications, ex vivo expansion of MSCs is necessary, but aging, loss of stemness and undesired differentiation of them during in vitro cultivation reduces their effectiveness. For achieving ideal therapeutic potential of MSCs in tissue regenerative purposes, it is necessary to retain their stemness properties in vitro. This review emphasis on the last updates in preserving the self-renewal capability of stem cells through in vitro expansion with different parameters

    Association between milk and milk product consumption and anthropometric measures in adult men and women in India: a cross-sectional study.

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    BACKGROUND: The nutritional aetiology of obesity remains unclear, especially with regard to the role of dairy products in developing countries. OBJECTIVE: To examine whether milk/milk product consumption is associated with obesity and high waist circumference among adult Indians. METHODS: Information on plain milk, tea, curd and buttermilk/lassi consumption assessed using a Food Frequency Questionnaire was obtained from the cross-sectional sib-pair designed Indian Migration Study (3698 men and 2659 women), conducted at four factory locations across north, central and south India. The anthropometric measures included were Body Mass Index (BMI) and Waist Circumference (WC). Mixed-effect logistic regression models were conducted to accommodate sib-pair design and adjust for potential confounders. RESULTS: After controlling for potential confounders, the risk of being obese (BMI ≥ 25 kg/m(2)) was lower among women (OR = 0.57;95%CI:0.43-0.76;p ≤ 0.0001) and men (OR = 0.67;95%CI: 0.51-0.87;p = 0.005), and the risk of a high WC (men: >90 cm; women: >80 cm) was lower among men (OR = 0.71;95%CI:0.54-0.93;p = 0.005) and women (OR = 0.79;95%CI:0.59-1.05;p>0.05) who consume ≥1 portions of plain milk daily than those who do not consume any milk. The inverse association between daily plain milk consumption and obesity was also confirmed in sibling-pair analyses. Daily tea consumption of ≥ 1 portion was associated with obesity (OR = 1.51;95%CI:1.00-2.25;p>0.050) and high WC (OR = 1.65;95%CI:1.08-2.51;p>0.019) among men but not among women but there was no strong evidence of association of curd and buttermilk/lassi consumption with obesity and high waist circumference among both men and women. CONCLUSIONS: The independent, inverse association of daily plain milk consumption with the risk of being obese suggests that high plain milk intake may lower the risk of obesity in adult Indians. However, this is an observational finding and uncontrolled confounding cannot be excluded as an explanation for the association. Therefore, confirmatory studies are needed to clarify this relationship

    Association study of 25 type 2 diabetes related Loci with measures of obesity in Indian sib pairs.

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    Obesity is an established risk factor for type 2 diabetes (T2D) and they are metabolically related through the mechanism of insulin resistance. In order to explore how common genetic variants associated with T2D correlate with body mass index (BMI), we examined the influence of 25 T2D associated loci on obesity risk. We used 5056 individuals (2528 sib-pairs) recruited in Indian Migration Study and conducted within sib-pair analysis for six obesity phenotypes. We found associations of variants in CXCR4 (rs932206) and HHEX (rs5015480) with higher body mass index (BMI) (β=0.13, p=0.001) and (β=0.09, p=0.002), respectively and weight (β=0.13, p=0.001) and (β=0.09, p=0.001), respectively. CXCR4 variant was also strongly associated with body fat (β=0.10, p=0.0004). In addition, we demonstrated associations of CXCR4 and HHEX with overweight/obesity (OR=1.6, p=0.003) and (OR=1.4, p=0.002), respectively, in 1333 sib-pairs (2666 individuals). We observed marginal evidence of associations between variants at six loci (TCF7L2, NGN3, FOXA2, LOC646279, FLJ39370 and THADA) and waist hip ratio (WHR), BMI and/or overweight which needs to be validated in larger set of samples. All the above findings were independent of daily energy consumption and physical activity level. The risk score estimates based on eight significant loci (including nominal associations) showed associations with WHR and body fat which were independent of BMI. In summary, we establish the role of T2D associated loci in influencing the measures of obesity in Indian population, suggesting common underlying pathophysiology across populations

    Photodynamic vaccination: Novel strategies of vaccine delivery by intraphagolysosomal parasites and their oxidative inactivation for safe and effective applications.

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    Leishmania (trypanosomatid protozoa) have a number of advantages, which distinguish them favorably from other microbes/particles to serve as a universal vaccine carrier. Biotechnology is well-established to produce transgenic Leishmania for expressing peptide vaccines. Multiple vaccines can be expressed episomally at high capacity via its eukaryotic mechanisms of protein translation and post-translational modifications, e. g. N-glycosylation. Technology is also available to grow Leishmania in serum-free/autoclavable or chemically defined media that is expandable to industrial scale cost-effectively. The major attributes of Leishmania for vaccine delivery are their surface glyco-conjugates responsible for the following properties: Protection of Leishmania, hence their expressed vaccines from losses to the activities of humoral factors in the mammalian hosts; Targeting the vaccines to the phagosome-lysosome vacuolar system of macrophages and dendritic cells - a desirable destination for effective vaccine processing and presentation; and Serving as potential adjuvants for the natural vaccines to elicit the lasting immunity seen after spontaneous/therapeutic cure of human leishmaniasis. Significantly, the surface glycoconjugates retain these functional activities when Leishmania are photo-inactivated with reactive oxygen species (ROS). Photo-inactivation of Leishmania with ROS eliminates their immunosuppressive activities and releases vaccines in macrophages. A complete loss of Leishmania viability in vitro and in vivo ensues, especially when doubly photo-inactivated for cytosolic accumulation of uroporphyrin and endosomal uptake of exogenous cationic phthalocyanines. The delivery of ovalbumin (OVA) as a surrogate vaccine by such photo-inactivated Leishmania is more effective than by conventional methods in activation of OVA peptide-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. Previously, evidence has been presented, showing that photodynamic vaccination of animals with Leishmania so inactivated produced effective immunity that is adaptively transferable to naïve individuals against experimental leishmaniasis. Immunotherapy of canine leishmaniasis with photo-inactivated Leishmania produced encouraging preliminary results. Work is also underway to use such carrier to deliver add-on vaccines against other infectious and malignant disease
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