11 research outputs found

    Species of Fusarium isolated from river and sea water of Southeastern Spain and pathogenicity on four plant species

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    Species of Fusarium were isolated from water samples collected from the Andarax River and coastal sea water of the Mediterranean in Granada and Almería provinces of southeastern Spain. In total, 18 water samples were analyzed from the Andarax River, and 10 species of Fusarium were isolated: Fusarium anthophilum, F. acuminatum, F. chlamydosporum, F. culmorum, F. equiseti, F. verticillioides, F. oxysporum, F. proliferatum, F. solani, and F. solani. When considering the samples by their origins, 77.8% of the river water samples yielded at least one species of Fusarium , with F. oxysporum comprising 72.2% of the total isolates. In the case of marine water, 45.5% of the samples yielded at least one species of Fusarium, with F. solani comprising 36.3% of the total isolates. The pathogenicity of 41 isolates representing nine of the species collected from river an sea water during the study ws evluated on barley, kohlrabe, melon, and tomato. Inoculation with F. acuminatum, F. chlamydosporum, F. culmorum, F. equiseti, F. verticillioides, F. oxysporum, F. proliferatum F. solani, and F. sambucinum resulted in pre-and post-emergence damping off. Pathogenicity of Fusarium isolates did not seem to be related to the origin of the isolates (sea water or fresh water). However, the presence of pathogenic species of Fusarium in river water flowing to the sea could indicate long-distance dispersal in natural water environment

    Advances in establishment and analysis of three-dimensional tumor spheroid-based functional assays for target validation and drug evaluation

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    There is overwhelming evidence that in vitro three-dimensional tumor cell cultures more accurately reflect the complex in vivo microenvironment than simple two-dimensional cell monolayers, not least with respect to gene expression profiles, signaling pathway activity and drug sensitivity. However, most currently available threedimensional techniques are time consuming and/or lack reproducibility; thus standardized and rapid protocols are urgently needed. To address this requirement, we have developed a versatile toolkit of reproducible three-dimensional tumor spheroid models for dynamic, automated, quantitative imaging and analysis that are compatible with routine high-throughput preclinical studies. Not only do these microplate methods measure three-dimensional tumor growth, but they have also been significantly enhanced to facilitate a range of functional assays exemplifying additional key hallmarks of cancer, namely cell motility and matrix invasion. Moreover, mutual tissue invasion and angiogenesis is accommodated by coculturing tumor spheroids with murine embryoid bodies within which angiogenic differentiation occurs. Highly malignant human tumor cells were selected to exemplify therapeutic effects of three specific molecularly-targeted agents: PI-103 (phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase (PI3K)- mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) inhibitor), 17-N-allylamino-17-demethoxygeldanamycin (17-AAG) (heat shock protein 90 (HSP90) inhibitor) and CCT130234 (in-house phospholipase C (PLC)g inhibitor). Fully automated analysis using a Celigo cytometer was validated for tumor spheroid growth and invasion against standard image analysis techniques, with excellent reproducibility and significantly increased throughput. In addition, we discovered key differential sensitivities to targeted agents between two-dimensional and three-dimensional cultures, and also demonstrated enhanced potency of some agents against cell migration/invasion compared with proliferation, suggesting their preferential utility in metastatic disease.: We have established and validated a suite of highly reproducible tumor microplate threedimensional functional assays to enhance the biological relevance of early preclinical cancer studies. We believe these assays will increase the translational predictive value of in vitro drug evaluation studies and reduce the need for in vivo studies by more effective triaging of compounds.This work was funded by The National Centre for the Replacement, Refinement and Reduction of Animals in Research (G1000121 ID no. 94513), Cancer Research UK (grant number C309/A8274), and by Red Tematica de Investigación Cooperativa en Cancer (RD06/0020/1022). We acknowledge NHS funding to the NIHR Biomedical Research Centre. MM is supported by a postdoctoral research contract (FIS, Program ‘Sara Borrell’, Instituto de Salud Carlos III), Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación, Spain

    Evaluación del poder patógeno de especies de Fusarium aisladas de aguas de cauces fluviales y fondos marinos de España sobre cuatro especies vegetales.

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    En este artículo se estudia la patogenicidad de las especies de Fusarium aisladas de muestras de fondos marinos del Mediterráneo y de aguas del cauce del río Andarax en las provincias de Granada y Almería (Sureste de España) sobre plántulas de cebada, colirrábano, melón y tomate. La evaluación del poder patógeno se hizo para 41 aislados de 9 especies de Fusarium aisladas de agus de mar y de río: F. acuminatum, F. chlamydosporum, F.culmorum, F. equiseti, F. verticillioides, F. oxysporum, F. proliferatum, F. sambucinum y F. solani. Todos los aislados de las diferentes especies mostraron patogenicidad tanto en preemergencia como en postemergencia de plántulas. No fue posible distiguir a los aislados según su procedencia: aguas marinas o de río

    Especies de Fusarium aisladas de aguas de cauces fluviales y fondos marinos del litoral sureste de España

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    Este trabajo es continuación de una serie de estudios sobre la biogeografía de Fusarium que se están realizando desde hace 5 años en España. En él se presentan los resultados analíticos para el género Fusarium de muestras de aguas del cauce del río Andarax y de fondos del mar Mediterráneo en las provincias de Granada y Almería (Sureste de España). Se analizan un total de 18 muestras de agua del río Andarax. De ellas se aislaron 10 especies de Fusarium: F. anthophilum, F. acuminatum, F. chlamydosporum, F. culmorum, F. equiseti, F. verticillioides, F. oxysporum, F. proliferatum, F. solani y F. sambucinum. De las 23 muestras del mar Mediterráneo se aislaron 5 especies: F. equiseti,F. moliniforme, F. oxysporum, F. proliferatum y F. solani. Sobre el total de muestras analizadas, un 27,45% de las muestras de aguas del río y un 29,41% de muestras de procedencia marina presentaron como mínimo una especie de Fusarium a lo largo de casi 12 meses de muestreo. Considerando las muestras según sus orígenes se encuentra que en las de origen aguas del río un 77,77% presentaron alguna especie de Fusarium; en el caso de los fondos marinos un 45,45% de las muestras presentó alguna especie de Fusarium. La mayor presencia de especies en las aguas del río puede ser debida a los contenidos en el agua de partículas de suelo y materia orgánica, después de los arrastres producidos en las orillas por las lluvias. La presencia de especies encontradas en el mar puede ser consecuencia de las aguas de los cauces que desembocan en éste. Sin embargo, no pueden excluirse otras vías

    Apoptosis in mesenchymal stromal cells induces in vivo recipient-mediated immunomodulation

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    The immunosuppressive activity of mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) is well documented. However, the therapeutic benefit is completely unpredictable, thus raising concerns about MSC efficacy. One of the affecting factors is the unresolved conundrum that, despite being immunosuppressive, MSCs are undetectable after administration. Therefore, understanding the fate of infused MSCs could help predict clinical responses. Using a murine model of graft-versus-host disease (GvHD), we demonstrate that MSCs are actively induced to undergo perforin-dependent apoptosis by recipient cytotoxic cells and that this process is essential to initiate MSC-induced immunosuppression. When examining patients with GvHD who received MSCs, we found a striking parallel, whereby only those with high cytotoxic activity against MSCs responded to MSC infusion, whereas those with low activity did not. The need for recipient cytotoxic cell activity could be replaced by the infusion of apoptotic MSCs generated ex vivo. After infusion, recipient phagocytes engulf apoptotic MSCs and produce indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase, which is ultimately necessary for effecting immunosuppression. Therefore, we propose the innovative concept that patients should be stratified for MSC treatment according to their ability to kill MSCs or that all patients could be treated with ex vivo apoptotic MSCs.</p
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