25 research outputs found
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Integrin-mediated traction force enhances paxillin molecular associations and adhesion dynamics that increase the invasiveness of tumor cells into a three-dimensional extracellular matrix.
Metastasis requires tumor cells to navigate through a stiff stroma and squeeze through confined microenvironments. Whether tumors exploit unique biophysical properties to metastasize remains unclear. Data show that invading mammary tumor cells, when cultured in a stiffened three-dimensional extracellular matrix that recapitulates the primary tumor stroma, adopt a basal-like phenotype. Metastatic tumor cells and basal-like tumor cells exert higher integrin-mediated traction forces at the bulk and molecular levels, consistent with a motor-clutch model in which motors and clutches are both increased. Basal-like nonmalignant mammary epithelial cells also display an altered integrin adhesion molecular organization at the nanoscale and recruit a suite of paxillin-associated proteins implicated in invasion and metastasis. Phosphorylation of paxillin by Src family kinases, which regulates adhesion turnover, is similarly enhanced in the metastatic and basal-like tumor cells, fostered by a stiff matrix, and critical for tumor cell invasion in our assays. Bioinformatics reveals an unappreciated relationship between Src kinases, paxillin, and survival of breast cancer patients. Thus adoption of the basal-like adhesion phenotype may favor the recruitment of molecules that facilitate tumor metastasis to integrin-based adhesions. Analysis of the physical properties of tumor cells and integrin adhesion composition in biopsies may be predictive of patient outcome
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An Anti-CD3 Antibody, Teplizumab, in Relatives at Risk for Type 1 Diabetes.
BackgroundType 1 diabetes is a chronic autoimmune disease that leads to destruction of insulin-producing beta cells and dependence on exogenous insulin for survival. Some interventions have delayed the loss of insulin production in patients with type 1 diabetes, but interventions that might affect clinical progression before diagnosis are needed.MethodsWe conducted a phase 2, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial of teplizumab (an Fc receptor-nonbinding anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody) involving relatives of patients with type 1 diabetes who did not have diabetes but were at high risk for development of clinical disease. Patients were randomly assigned to a single 14-day course of teplizumab or placebo, and follow-up for progression to clinical type 1 diabetes was performed with the use of oral glucose-tolerance tests at 6-month intervals.ResultsA total of 76 participants (55 [72%] of whom were ≤18 years of age) underwent randomization - 44 to the teplizumab group and 32 to the placebo group. The median time to the diagnosis of type 1 diabetes was 48.4 months in the teplizumab group and 24.4 months in the placebo group; the disease was diagnosed in 19 (43%) of the participants who received teplizumab and in 23 (72%) of those who received placebo. The hazard ratio for the diagnosis of type 1 diabetes (teplizumab vs. placebo) was 0.41 (95% confidence interval, 0.22 to 0.78; P = 0.006 by adjusted Cox proportional-hazards model). The annualized rates of diagnosis of diabetes were 14.9% per year in the teplizumab group and 35.9% per year in the placebo group. There were expected adverse events of rash and transient lymphopenia. KLRG1+TIGIT+CD8+ T cells were more common in the teplizumab group than in the placebo group. Among the participants who were HLA-DR3-negative, HLA-DR4-positive, or anti-zinc transporter 8 antibody-negative, fewer participants in the teplizumab group than in the placebo group had diabetes diagnosed.ConclusionsTeplizumab delayed progression to clinical type 1 diabetes in high-risk participants. (Funded by the National Institutes of Health and others; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01030861.)
Iron isotope fractionation in subterranean estuaries
Author Posting. © Elsevier B.V., 2008. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B.V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 72 (2008): 3413-3430, doi:10.1016/j.gca.2008.05.001.Dissolved Fe concentrations in subterranean estuaries, like their river-seawater
counterparts, are strongly controlled by non-conservative behavior during mixing of groundwater
and seawater in coastal aquifers. Previous studies at a subterranean estuary of Waquoit Bay on
Cape Cod, USA demonstrate extensive precipitation of groundwater-borne dissolved ferrous iron
and subsequent accumulation of iron oxides onto subsurface sands. Waquoit Bay is thus an
excellent natural laboratory to assess the mechanisms of Fe-isotope fractionation in redoxstratified
environments and determine potential Fe-isotope signatures of groundwater sources to
coastal seawater. Here, we report Fe isotope compositions of iron-coated sands and porewaters
beneath the intertidal zone of Waquoit Bay. The distribution of pore water Fe shows two distinct
sources of Fe: one residing in the upward rising plume of Fe-rich groundwater and the second in
the salt-wedge zone of pore water. The groundwater source has high Fe(II) concentration
consistent with anoxic conditions and yield δ56Fe values between 0.3 and –1.3‰. In contrast,
sediment porewaters occurring in the mixing zone of the subterranean estuary have very low
δ56Fe values down to –5‰. These low δ56Fe values reflect Fe-redox cycling and result from the
preferential retention of heavy Fe-isotopes onto newly formed Fe-oxyhydroxides. Analysis of Feoxides
precipitated onto subsurface sands in two cores from the subterranean estuary revealed
strong δ56Fe and Fe concentration gradients over less than 2m, yielding an overall range of δ56Fe
values between –2 and 1.5‰. The relationship between Fe concentration and δ56Fe of Fe-rich
sands can be modeled by the progressive precipitation of Fe-oxides along fluid flow through the
subterranean estuary. These results demonstrate that large-scale Fe isotope fractionation (up to
5‰) can occur in subterranean estuaries, which could lead to coastal seawater characterized by
very low δ56Fe values relative to river values.This study was supported by the National Science Foundation (OCE 0550066) to OR and
ES , (OCE 0095384) to MC and ES and NASA Astrobiology Institute - Cycle 3 CAN-02-OSS-02
to KJE
Abnormal neutrophil signature in the blood and pancreas of presymptomatic and symptomatic type 1 diabetes
BACKGROUND. Neutrophils and their inflammatory mediators are key pathogenic components in multiple autoimmune diseases, while their role in human type 1 diabetes (T1D), a disease that progresses sequentially through identifiable stages prior to the clinical onset, is not well understood. We previously reported that the number of circulating neutrophils is reduced in patients with T1D and in presymptomatic at-risk subjects. The aim of the present work was to identify possible changes in circulating and pancreas-residing neutrophils throughout the disease course to better elucidate neutrophil involvement in human T1D.
METHODS. Data collected from 389 subjects at risk of developing T1D, and enrolled in 4 distinct studies performed by TrialNet, were analyzed with comprehensive statistical approaches to determine whether the number of circulating neutrophils correlates with pancreas function. To obtain a broad analysis of pancreas-infiltrating neutrophils throughout all disease stages, pancreas sections collected worldwide from 4 different cohorts (i.e., nPOD, DiViD, Siena, and Exeter) were analyzed by immunohistochemistry and immunofluorescence. Finally, circulating neutrophils were purified from unrelated nondiabetic subjects and donors at various T1D stages and their transcriptomic signature was determined by RNA sequencing.
RESULTS. Here, we show that the decline in β cell function is greatest in individuals with the lowest peripheral neutrophil numbers. Neutrophils infiltrate the pancreas prior to the onset of symptoms and they continue to do so as the disease progresses. Of interest, a fraction of these pancreasinfiltrating neutrophils also extrudes neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), suggesting a tissue-specific pathogenic role. Whole-transcriptome analysis of purified blood neutrophils revealed a unique molecular signature that is distinguished by an overabundance of IFN-associated genes; despite being healthy, said signature is already present in T1D-autoantibody-negative at-risk subjects.
CONCLUSIONS. These results reveal an unexpected abnormality in neutrophil disposition both in the circulation and in the pancreas of presymptomatic and symptomatic T1D subjects, implying that targeting neutrophils might represent a previously unrecognized therapeutic modality
Agelaius phoeniceus STR fragment sizes
This file contains short tandem repeat (STR or microsatellite) data from specimens of Agelaius phoeniceus, as used in different analyses reported in the paper. Each row is one allele for one locus for one individual. See the ReadMe file for additional details
Data from: Range dynamics, rather than convergent selection, explain the mosaic distribution of red-winged blackbird phenotypes
Geographic distributions of genetic and phenotypic characters can illuminate historical evolutionary processes. In particular, mosaic distributions of phenotypically similar populations can arise from parallel evolution or from irregular patterns of dispersal and colonization by divergent forms. Two phenotypically divergent forms of the red-winged blackbird (Agelaius phoeniceus) show a mosaic phenotypic distribution, with a “bicolored” form occurring disjunctly in California and Mexico. We analyzed the relationships among these bicolored populations and neighboring typical populations, using ~600 bp of mitochondrial DNA sequence data and 10 nuclear short tandem repeat loci. We find that bicolored populations, although separated by ~3000 km, are genetically more similar to one other than they are to typical populations separated by ~400 km. We also find evidence of ongoing gene flow among populations, including some evidence of asymmetric gene flow. We conclude that the current distribution of bicolored forms represents incomplete speciation, where recent asymmetric hybridization with typical A. phoeniceus is dividing the range of a formerly widespread bicolored form. This hypothesis predicts that bicolored forms may suffer extinction by hybridization. Future work will use fine-scaled geographical sampling and nuclear sequence data to test for hybrid origins of currently typical populations and to more precisely quantify the directionality of gene flow
Agelaius phoeniceus samples
This file contains data on the individual specimens of Agelaius phoeniceus sampled for this paper. Each row is one individual included in the analyses. See the ReadMe file for additional details
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Scanning angle interference microscopy reveals cell dynamics at the nanoscale.
Emerging questions in cell biology necessitate nanoscale imaging in live cells. Here we present scanning angle interference microscopy, which is capable of localizing fluorescent objects with nanoscale precision along the optical axis in motile cellular structures. We use this approach to resolve nanotopographical features of the cell membrane and cytoskeleton as well as the temporal evolution, three-dimensional architecture and nanoscale dynamics of focal adhesion complexes
Gene expression profiles predict treatment outcomes in Brucellosis
Annual Meeting of the American-Association-of-Immunologists (AAI), Seattle, WA, MAY 13-17, 2016International audienceno abstrac