18 research outputs found
Protective role of chaperone-mediated autophagy against atherosclerosis
Significance Cardiovascular diseases remain the leading cause of death worldwide, with atherosclerosis being the most common source of clinical events. Metabolic changes with aging associate with concurrent increased risk of both type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease, with the former further raising the risk of the latter. The activity of a selective type of autophagy, chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA), decreases with age or upon dietary excesses. Here we study whether reduced CMA activity increases risk of atherosclerosis in mouse models. We have identified that CMA is up-regulated early in response to proatherogenic challenges and demonstrate that reduced systemic CMA aggravates vascular pathology in these conditions. We also provide proof-of-concept support that CMA up-regulation is an effective intervention to reduce atherosclerosis severity and progression
Medarbetarskap i förskolan.
Chemical modification procedures have been used to study the interaction of tricyclic and non-tricyclic 5HT-reuptake inhibitors with the [3H]imipramine binding site (IBS). N-Ethoxycarbonyl-2-ethoxy-1,2-dihydroquinoline (EEDQ) induced a pronounced loss in [3H]imipramine binding due to a reduction in Bmax. Preincubation with reuptake inhibitors and subsequent inactivation by EEDQ revealed that imipramine and 5HT prevented the EEDQ-induced inhibition, but citalopram and fluoxetine did not. Thiol modification studies demonstrated that reduction by dithiothreitol (DTT) enhanced the binding of [3H]imipramine by increasing the Bmax. The thioselective reagents 1,1-diaxobis-(N,N-dimethylformamide) (diamide), phenyl-arsineoxide (PAO) and N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) attenuated the binding capacity by lowering the Bmax. PAO, a reversible thiol reagent, prevented NEM alkylation indicating that dithiols are involved in the NEM-induced inactivation. Binding of tricyclics or non-tricyclics prior to PAO inactivation revealed that tricyclics provide complete protection against thiol modification, while the non-tricyclics do not. The results support the hypothesis that the 5HT-reuptake system of human platelets possesses at least two distinguishable binding sites.
APPROACHES TO THE PURIFICATION OF THE 5-HYDROXYTRYPTAMINE REUPTAKE SYSTEM FROM HUMAN BLOOD-PLATELETS
APPROACHES TO THE PURIFICATION OF THE 5-HYDROXYTRYPTAMINE REUPTAKE SYSTEM FROM HUMAN BLOOD-PLATELETS
In vitro and in vivo analysis of expression cassettes designed for vascular gene transfer
Increasing the level and duration of transgene expression and restricting expression to vascular cells are important goals for clinically useful gene therapy vectors. We evaluated several promoters, enhancers and introns in endothelial, smooth muscle and liver cells in tissue culture and in vivo, comparing local delivery to the carotid artery with intravenous delivery to the liver. A 1800-bp fragment of the oxidized LDL receptor (LOX-1) promoter showed highest in vivo activity in the carotid artery, achieving 39% the activity of the reference cytomegalovirus promoter, with 188-fold greater specificity for carotid artery over liver. An enhancer from the Tie2 gene in combination with the intracellular adhesion molecule-2 promoter improved endothelial specificity of plasmid vectors, increased the expression from adenoviral vectors in cultured endothelial cells and doubled the specificity for carotid artery over liver in vivo. Adding a short intron to expression cassettes increased expression in both endothelial and smooth muscle cells in vitro; however, the eNOS enhancer failed to consistently increase the expression or endothelial specificity of the vector. In conclusion, elements from the LOX-1 promoter and Tie2 enhancer together with an intron can be used to improve vectors for vascular gene transfer