3,324 research outputs found
ADAPTIVE AND NATIVE IMMUNE CELLS AS PROGNOSTIC AND PREDICTIVE BIOMARKERS ALONG COLORECTAL CANCER PROGRESSION
Inflammation and cells of the innate immune system are known to contribute to tumour initiation and progression. Differently, the adaptive immune response controls growth and dissemination of established tumours . The double edge role of inflammatory and adaptive components of immune system in solid tumours are well represented in CRC. The progression and survival of patients with CRC is known to be modified by the interactions generated between the tumour and the host\u2019s response in a milieu named tumour microenvironment, composed by local immune responses. The quantification of the density and the type of immune cells in the tumour microenvironment has been a challenge since the early 60\u2019s of the last century. However their role and clinical significance in different human cancers has not been unequivocally addressed and still there is a strong interest in determining the dynamics of immunosurveillance and immunoevasion, and the role of immune cells infiltrating CRC. Recently, experimental support was provided that cancer infiltrating immune cells might be a crucial factor in chemotherapy mediated tumour cell death. Despite effort in this field there\u2019s still no clinical evidence in CRC regarding any effect modification by tumour infiltrating cells in enhancing the benefit of chemotherapy treatment, or whether this parameter might help to identify patients who would benefit from adjuvant therapy. In this context, tumour associated macrophages (TAM) represent the prevailing population in different cancers and are thought to enhance tumour cells proliferation and survival. Tissue macrophages are players of the innate immune response capable of phagocytosis and antigen presentation, that play a key role in directing immune responses through secretion of a plethora of factors. In CRC data regarding TAM and tumour progression are controversial. Of interest, in an experimental model of cancer TAM \u201cre-educated\u201d by CD40 ligand treatment, were found to be necessary to mediate antitumour activity, whereas tumour infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) were irrelevant, supporting the hypothesis that TAM might mediate anti-tumour activity in certain conditions. The aim of this thesis was to study the prognostic significance of different populations (CD3+ and FOXP3+ TILs and CD68+ TAMs) of immune cells in the tumour microenvironment, and their interactions with demographic and clinicopathological variables in a large dataset of stage II and III CRC patients. We first found that the cellular mediators of immunosurveillance seems to change along with the lymph-nodal involvement at diagnosis. Higher densities of TILs (both CD3+ and FOXP3+ cells) were associated with better prognosis among stage II CRC patients, but not in stage III. On the other hand, higher densities of TAM were associated with better prognosis only among stage III CRC patients, but not in stage II. This data suggest that TILs mediate immunosurveillance in early stages of disease, while when the tumour has the ability to invade and spread to metastatic lymphnodes the mediators of surveillance seem to be macrophages. In detailed analysis, higher densities of TAM in stage III CRC were found to interact only with the variable 5-Fluoro-uracyl (5-FU) adjuvant chemotherapy treatment in predicting patients prognosis. We found that in stage III CRC patients, higher densities of TAM were associated with better survival only among those who received 5-FU chemotherapy. Moreover, the predictive effect of TAM in determining the efficacy of 5-FU chemotherapy showed significance only in microsatellite Stable (MSS) CRC patients. This is in accordance with the fact that microsatellite instability in CRC is a well-known negative predictor of response to 5-FU chemotherapy. The positive predictive effect of TAM in stage III CRC prompted us to confirm our findings in the non-colonic metastatic site of those patients. The densities of TAM in metastatic lymphnodes retained a positive predictive effect in identifying patients obtaining a prognostic advantage with 5-FU chemotherapy treatment. Therefore, the antitumour effect of TAM in 5-FU treated patients is likely to be exerted mainly on tumour micrometastasis which spread from the primary site and may cause recurrence of CRC. Ultimately, our data are in accordance with clinical guidelines supporting the use of 5-FU as adjuvant treatment only in stage III CRC. This study shed basis for the future identification of the molecular basis and the functional role of TAM in mediating 5-FU tumour cell death in reliable experimental models of CRC
Green next-generation excipients enriched in polyphenols from recovery of grape processing waste black bentonite: Influence of unconventional extraction solvents on antioxidant properties and composition
According to the UN Agenda 2030, several actions could be taken to act synergistically towards various areas of critical importance for both the humanity and the planet. Among them, the application of a circular economy model based on the valorisation of the wastes from the local resources could be a virtuous attitude. In this view, this work proposes a dual green approach for recovery of the waste black bentonite from the fining of organic white grape must. Indeed, this virtuous recovery idea is enhanced by the choice of both eco-friendly extraction method (maceration) and solvents. The latter were unconventional solvents selected among the pharmaceutic/cosmetic liquid hydrophilic excipients (waste-to-market approach) characterized by safety and high solvent power toward polyphenols. PEGs (200, 400, 600), Propylene Glycol and Glycerol
were tested and the extracted compared by HPLC-DAD analyses as well as the Folin-Ciocalteu, DPPH and Bradford assays. PEG200 emerged as the best one, leading to coloured extract containing great amount of polyphenols (3.123 ± 0.106 mg/g) and specifically Quercetin (60.778 ± 2.307 μg/mL), which confer it interesting scavenger properties, potentially making it directly useful in a wide range of fields from the pharmaceutic to the cosmetic ones
Nature-Inspired Interconnects for Self-Assembled Large-Scale Network-on-Chip Designs
Future nano-scale electronics built up from an Avogadro number of components
needs efficient, highly scalable, and robust means of communication in order to
be competitive with traditional silicon approaches. In recent years, the
Networks-on-Chip (NoC) paradigm emerged as a promising solution to interconnect
challenges in silicon-based electronics. Current NoC architectures are either
highly regular or fully customized, both of which represent implausible
assumptions for emerging bottom-up self-assembled molecular electronics that
are generally assumed to have a high degree of irregularity and imperfection.
Here, we pragmatically and experimentally investigate important design
trade-offs and properties of an irregular, abstract, yet physically plausible
3D small-world interconnect fabric that is inspired by modern network-on-chip
paradigms. We vary the framework's key parameters, such as the connectivity,
the number of switch nodes, the distribution of long- versus short-range
connections, and measure the network's relevant communication characteristics.
We further explore the robustness against link failures and the ability and
efficiency to solve a simple toy problem, the synchronization task. The results
confirm that (1) computation in irregular assemblies is a promising and
disruptive computing paradigm for self-assembled nano-scale electronics and (2)
that 3D small-world interconnect fabrics with a power-law decaying distribution
of shortcut lengths are physically plausible and have major advantages over
local 2D and 3D regular topologies
Improvement of resveratrol permeation through sublingual mucosa: Chemical permeation enhancers versus spray drying technique to obtain fast-disintegrating sublingual mini-tablets
Resveratrol (RSV) is a natural polyphenol with several interesting broad-spectrum pharmacological properties. However, it is characterized by poor oral bioavailability, extensive first-pass effect metabolism and low stability. Indeed, RSV could benefit from the advantage of the sublingual route of administration. In this view, RSV attitudes to crossing the porcine sublingual mucosa were evaluated and promoted both by six different chemical permeation enhancers (CPEs) as well as by preparing four innovative fast-disintegrating sublingual mini-tablets by spray drying followed by direct compression. Since RSV by itself exhibits a low permeation aptitude, this could be significantly enhanced by the use of CPEs as well as by embedding RSV in a spray-dried powder to be compressed in order to prepare fast-disintegrating mini-tablets. The most promising observed CPEs (menthol, lysine and urea) were then inserted into the most promising spray-dried excipients’ compositions (RSV-B and RSV-C), thus preparing CPE-loaded mini-tablets. However, this procedure leads to unsatisfactory results which preclude the possibility of merging the two proposed approaches. Finally, the best spray-dried composition (RSV-B) was further evaluated by SEM, FTIR, XRD and disintegration as well as dissolution behavior to prove its effectiveness as a sublingual fast-disintegrating formulation
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