104 research outputs found

    Tumors in invertebrates

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    Tumors are ectopic masses of tissue formed by due to an abnormal cell proliferation. In this review tumors of several invertebrate species are examined. The description of tumors in invertebrates may be a difficult task, because the pathologists are usually inexperienced with invertebrate tissues, and the experts in invertebrate biology are not familiar with the description of tumors. As a consequence, the terminology used in defining the tumor type is related to that used in mammalian pathology, which can create misunderstandings in some occasions

    Cellular mechanisms and second messengers: relevance to the psychopharmacology of bipolar disorders

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    The discovery of lithium's efficacy as a mood-stabilizing agent revolutionized the treatment of patients with bipolar disorder and after five decades, lithium continues to be the mainstay of treatment for bipolar disorder. Recent research on the molecular mechanism underlying the therapeutic effect of lithium has focused on how it changes the activities of cellular signal transduction systems, especially the cyclic AMP and phosphomositide second-messenger systems. Considerable data suggest that carbamazepine and valproate (VPA) are an alternative or adjunctive treatment to lithium. VPA, despite being dissimilar structurally to lithium, shares most of the effects of lithium at the level of protein kinase C (PKC). Like lithium, VPA reduces the activity of PKC and reduces the protein levels of different PKC isoforms, however the effects of VPA appear to be largely independent of inositol. The ton-term efficacy of VPA and lithium in bipolar disorder suggested that modulation of gene expression might be an important target for these drugs. Both VPA and lithium altered the expression of the early inducible genes for c-fos and cjun thus promoting the expression of specific proteins. The genes known to be regulated by the AP-1 family of transcription factors include genes for various neuropeptides, neurotrophins, receptors, transcription factors, enzymes, proteins that bind to cytoskeletal elements, and cytoprotective proteins such as bcl-2. In conclusion chronic treatment with lithium and other mood stabilizers, by regulating transcriptional factors, may modulate the expression of a variety of genes that compensate for aberrant signalling associated with the pathophysiology of bipolar disorder

    Circulating phagocytes: The ancient and conserved interface between immune and neuroendocrine function

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    Immune and neuroendocrine functions display significant overlap in highly divergent and evolutionarily distant models such as molluscs, crustaceans, insects and mammals. Fundamental players in this crosstalk are professional phagocytes: macrophages in vertebrates and immunocytes in invertebrates. Although they have different developmental origins, macrophages and immunocytes possess comparable functions and differentiate under the control of evolutionarily conserved transcription factors. Macrophages and immunocytes share their pools of receptors, signalling molecules and pathways with neural cells and the neuro-endocrine system. In crustaceans, adult transdifferentiation of circulating haemocytes into neural cells has been documented recently. In light of developmental, molecular and functional evidence, we propose that the immune-neuroendocrine role of circulating phagocytes pre-dates the split of protostomian and deuterostomian superphyla and has been conserved during the evolution of the main groups of metazoans

    Transcriptional effect of serotonin in the ganglia of Lymnaea stagnalis

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    The serotonin system (5HT) is highly conserved in both vertebrates and invertebrates, and numerous evidence supports a biological link between 5HT and numerous animal function. In the present paper we evaluated the transcriptional effects of a serotonergic stimulation on selected targets involved in 5HT signalling and neurotransmission in the central nervous system of the great pond snail Lymnaea stagnalis. Adult snails were treated acutely (6 h) or chronically (48 h) with either 5-hydroxytrypthophan (5-HTP 1mM), the immediate precursor of serotonin, fluoxetine (FLX 1ĂŽÂĽM), a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor, or a combination of two. The central ring ganglia were dissected and used for q-PCR gene expression analysis. Transcription was strongly induced following a chronic, but not an acute, exposure to 5-HTP in the ganglia of Lymnaea. In particular, LymCREB1 and LymP2X mRNA levels were decreased following a 6 h exposure and increased in snails receiving 5-hydroxytryptophan for 48 h. Interestingly, this effect was reduced when snails were exposed chronically to both 5-HTP and FLX, suggesting a role for SERT in mediating the effect of 5-hydroxytryptophan. These data suggest that L. stagnalis is suited to unravel the complexity of the serotonin signaling pathway

    Behavioral and Transcriptional Effects of Short or Prolonged Fasting on the Memory Performances of Lymnaea stagnalis

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    Introduction: The Garcia effect, a solid learning paradigm, was used to investigate the molecular and behavioral effects induced by different lengths of fasting on the cognitive functions in the pond snail Lymnaea stagnalis, a valid model systemMethods: Three experimental groups were used: Moderately hungry snails, food-deprived for 1 day (D1 snails), severely hungry snails (D5 snails), fasting for 5 days, and satiated snails with ad libitum access to food (AL snails). In the Garcia effect, a single pairing of an appetitive stimulus with a heat stressor results in a learned taste-specific negative hedonic shift. D5 snails were injected with bovine insulin and D1 snails with the insulin receptor antibody (Ab). As a control group, AL snails were injected with saline. Gene expression analyses were performed by Real-time PCR in snails' central nervous system (CNS).Results: AL snails are 'average learners', D1 snails are the best performers, whereas the D5 ones do not show the Garcia effect. Severely fasting snails injected with insulin 3h before the training procedure, show the Garcia effect, whereas injecting 1-day fasting snails with insulin receptor Ab blocks their ability to express memory. The differences in memory performances are associated with changes in the expression levels of selected targets involved in neuronal plasticity, energy homeostasis, and stress response.Discussion: Our results suggest that short-term fasting creates an optimal internal state in L. stagnalis' CNS, allowing a spike in insulin release and an upregulation of genes involved in neuroplasticity. Long-term fasting, instead, upregulates genes involved in energy homeostasis and animal survival

    Molecular changes associated with escitalopram response in a stress-based model of depression

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    Converging evidence points at hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis hyperactivity and neuroinflammation as important factors involved in the etiopathogenesis of major depressive disorder (MDD) and in therapeutic efficacy of antidepressants. In this study, we examined the molecular effects associated with a response to a week-long treatment with escitalopram in the chronic escape deficit (CED) model, a validated model of depression based on the induction of an escape deficit after exposure of rats to an unavoidable stress. We confirmed our previous result that a treatment with escitalopram (10 mg/kg) was effective after 7 days in reverting the stress-induced escape deficit in approximately 50% of the animals, separating responders from non-responders. Expression of markers of HPA axis functionality as well as several inflammatory mediators were evaluated in the hypothalamus, a key structure integrating signals from the neuro, immune, endocrine systems. In the hypothalamus of responder animals we observed a decrease in the expression of CRH and its receptors and an increase in GR protein in total and nuclear extracts; this effect was accompanied by a significant decrease in circulating corticosterone in the same cohort. Hypothalamic IL-1\uce\ub2 and TNF\uce\ub1 expression were increased in stressed animals, while CXCL2, IL-6, and ADAM17 mRNA levels were decreased in escitalopram treated rats regardless of the treatment response. These data suggest that efficacy of a one week treatment with escitalopram may be partially mediated by a decrease HPA axis activity, while in the hypothalamus the drug-induced effects on the expression of immune modulators did not correlate with the behavioural outcome

    Psychosocial assessment of families caring for a child with acute lymphoblastic leukemia, epilepsy or asthma: Psychosocial risk as network of interacting symptoms

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    The purpose of this study is to assess psychosocial risk across several pediatric medical conditions and test the hypothesis that different severe or chronic pediatric illnesses are characterized by disease specific enhanced psychosocial risk and that risk is driven by disease specific connectivity and interdependencies among various domains of psychosocial function using the Psychosocial Assessment Tool (PAT). In a multicenter prospective cohort study of 195 patients, aged 5-12, 90 diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), 42 with epilepsy and 63 with asthma, parents completed the PAT2.0 or the PAT2.0 generic version. Multivariate analysis was performed with disease as factor and age as covariate. Graph theory and network analysis was employed to study the connectivity and interdependencies among subscales of the PAT while data-driven cluster analysis was used to test whether common patterns of risk exist among the various diseases. Using a network modelling approach analysis, we observed unique patterns of interconnected domains of psychosocial factors. Each pathology was characterized by different interdependencies among the most central and most connected domains. Furthermore, data-driven cluster analysis resulted in two clusters: Patients with ALL (89%) mostly belonged to cluster 1, while patients with epilepsy and asthma belonged primarily to cluster 2 (83% and 82% respectively). In sum, implementing a network approach improves our comprehension concerning the character of the problems central to the development of psychosocial difficulties. Therapy directed at problems related to the most central domain(s) constitutes the more rational one because such an approach will inevitably carry over to other domains that depend on the more central function

    Quercetin, the new stress buster: Investigating the transcriptional and behavioral effects of this flavonoid on multiple stressors using Lymnaea stagnalis

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    Growing evidence suggests that a flavonoid-rich diet can prevent or reverse the effects of stressors, although the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. One common and abundant flavonoid found in numerous foods is quercetin. This study utilizes the pond snail Lymnaea stagnalis, a valid model organism for learning and memory, and a simple but robust learning paradigm—operant conditioning of aerial respiration—to explore the behavioral and transcriptional effects of different stressors on snails' cognitive functions and to investigate whether quercetin exposure can prevent stress effects on learning and memory formation. Our findings demonstrate that three different stressors—severe food deprivation, lipopolysaccharide injection (an inflammatory challenge), and fluoride exposure (a neurotoxic agent)—block memory formation for operant conditioning and affect the expression levels of key targets related to stress response, energy balance, and immune response in the snails' central ring ganglia. Remarkably, exposing snails to quercetin for 1 h before stress presentation prevents these effects at both the behavioral and transcriptional levels, demonstrating the potent stress-preventive properties of quercetin. Despite the evolutionary distance from humans, L. stagnalis has proven to be a valuable model for studying conserved mechanisms by which bioactive compounds like quercetin mitigate the adverse effects of various stressors on cognitive functions across species. Moreover, these findings offer insights into quercetin's potential for mitigating stress-induced physiological and cognitive impairments
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