71 research outputs found
PDE11A gene polymorphism in testicular cancer: sperm parameters and hormonal profile
Purpose: Testicular germ cell tumours (TGCTs) is the most common malignancy among young adult males. The etiology is multifactorial and both environmental and genetic factors play an important role in the origin and development of TGCT. Genetic susceptibility may result from the interaction of multiple common and low-penetrance genetic variants and one of the main candidate genes is PDE11A. Many PDE11A polymorphisms were found responsible for a reduced PDE activity in TGCT patients, who often also display impaired hormone and sperm profile. The aim of this study was to investigate testicular function and PDE11A sequence in testicular cancer cases. Methods: Semen analysis was performed in 116 patients with unilateral and bilateral sporadic TGCTs and in 120 cancer-free controls. We also investigated hormone profile and PDE11A polymorphisms using peripheral blood samples. Results: Our data revealed that TGCT patients showed lower testosterone levels, higher gonadotropins levels and worse semen quality than controls, although the mean and the medians of sperm parameters are within the reference limits. PDE11A sequencing detected ten polymorphisms not yet associated with TGCTs before. Among these, G223A in homozygosity and A288G in heterozygosity were significantly associated with a lower risk of testicular tumour and they displayed a positive correlation with total sperm number. Conclusions: Our findings highlight the key role of PDE11A in testis and suggest the presence of an underlying complex and fine molecular mechanism which controls testis-specific gene expression and susceptibility to testicular cancer
Extra-virgin olive oil contains a metabolo-epigenetic inhibitor of cancer stem cells
We are grateful to
Custodio Borrego for giving us free use of the photograph he
took of EVOO and olive trees in Granada (Spain), which have
been included in Figure 7. This work has been awarded with the
IV Premio Internacional Castillo de Canena de Investigación Oleícola
‘LUIS VAÑÓ’(IV Edition of Castillo de Canena LUIS VAÑÓ Award for
Research on Olive Cultivation and Olive Oil; UC Davis Olive Center,
Castillo de Canena, and Universidad de Jaén).The authors would like to thank Dr Kenneth McCreath for editorial
support. We are greatly indebted to Prof Robert A. Weinberg
(Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, Cambridge, MA)
for providing the HMLERshCntrol/HMLERshEcad cells used in this
work.Targeting tumor-initiating, drug-resistant populations of cancer stem cells (CSC) with phytochemicals is a novel
paradigm for cancer prevention and treatment. We herein employed a phenotypic drug discovery approach coupled to
mechanism-of-action profiling and target deconvolution to identify phenolic components of extra virgin olive oil (EVOO)
capable of suppressing the functional traits of CSC in breast cancer (BC). In vitro screening revealed that the secoiridoid
decarboxymethyl oleuropein aglycone (DOA) could selectively target subpopulations of epithelial-like, aldehyde
dehydrogenase (ALDH)-positive and mesenchymal-like, CD44+CD24−/low CSC. DOA could potently block the formation of
multicellular tumorspheres generated from single-founder stem-like cells in a panel of genetically diverse BC models.
Pretreatment of BC populations with noncytotoxic doses of DOA dramatically reduced subsequent tumor-forming capacity
in vivo. Mice orthotopically injected with CSC-enriched BC-cell populations pretreated with DOA remained tumor-free for
several months. Phenotype microarray-based screening pointed to a synergistic interaction of DOA with the mTOR inhibitor
rapamycin and the DNA methyltransferase (DNMT) inhibitor 5-azacytidine. In silico computational studies indicated that
DOA binds and inhibits the ATP-binding kinase domain site of mTOR and the S-adenosyl-l-methionine (SAM) cofactorbinding
pocket of DNMTs. FRET-based Z-LYTE™ and AlphaScreen-based in vitro assays confirmed the ability of DOA to
function as an ATP-competitive mTOR inhibitor and to block the SAM-dependent methylation activity of DNMTs. Our
systematic in vitro, in vivo and in silico approaches establish the phenol-conjugated oleoside DOA as a dual mTOR/DNMT
inhibitor naturally occurring in EVOO that functionally suppresses CSC-like states responsible for maintaining tumorinitiating
cell properties within BC populations.This work was supported by grants from the Ministerio de
Ciencia e Innovación (Grant SAF2016-80639-P to J.A.M.),
Plan Nacional de I+D+I, Spain, the Agència de Gestió d’Ajuts
Universitaris i de Recerca (AGAUR; Grant 2014 SGR229 to J.A.M.),
Departament d’Economia i Coneixement, Catalonia, Spain,
the Andalusian Regional Government Council of Innovation
and Science (Grant P11-CTS-7625 to A.S.-C.), the Ministerio de
Economía, Industria y Competitividad, Spain (Grants AGL2015-
67995-C2-3-R and AGL2015-67995-C3-1-R to A.S.-C. and V.M.)
and Conselleria d’Educació, Investigació, Cultura I Esport,
Generalitat Valenciana, Spain (Grant PROMETEO/2016/006 to
V.M). E.C. is supported by the Sara Borrell post doctoral contract
(CD15/00033) from the Ministerio de Sanidad y Consumo,
Fondo de Investigación Sanitaria (FIS), Spain
Facial Identity Recognition in the Broader Autism Phenotype
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Visual Scan Paths and Recognition of Facial Identity in Autism Spectrum Disorder and Typical Development
Background: Previous research suggests that many individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) have impaired facial identity recognition, and also exhibit abnormal visual scanning of faces. Here, two hypotheses accounting for an association between these observations were tested: i) better facial identity recognition is associated with increased gaze time on the Eye region; ii) better facial identity recognition is associated with increased eye-movements around the face. Methodology and Principal Findings: Eye-movements of 11 children with ASD and 11 age-matched typically developing (TD) controls were recorded whilst they viewed a series of faces, and then completed a two alternative forced-choice recognition memory test for the faces. Scores on the memory task were standardized according to age. In both groups, there was no evidence of an association between the proportion of time spent looking at the Eye region of faces and age-standardized recognition performance, thus the first hypothesis was rejected. However, the 'Dynamic Scanning Index' - which was incremented each time the participant saccaded into and out of one of the core-feature interest areas - was strongly asso ciated with age-standardized face recognition scores in both groups, even after controlling for various other potential predictors of performance. Conclusions and Significance: In support of the second hypothesis, results suggested that increased saccading between core-features was associated with more accurate face recognition ability, both in typical development and ASD. Causal directions of this relationship remain undetermined.10 page(s
Nucleophile-Catalyzed Additions to Activated Triple Bonds. Protection of Lactams, Imides, and Nucleosides with MocVinyl and Related Groups
Additions of lactams, imides, (S)-4-benzyl-1,3-oxazolidin-2-one, 2-pyridone, pyrimidine-2,4-diones (AZT derivatives), or inosines to the electron-deficient triple bonds of methyl propynoate, tert-butyl propynoate, 3-butyn-2-one, N-propynoylmorpholine, or N-methoxy-N-methylpropynamide in the presence of many potential catalysts were examined. DABCO and, second, DMAP appeared to be the best (highest reaction rates and E/Z ratios), while RuCl3, RuClCp*(PPh3)2, AuCl, AuCl(PPh3), CuI, and Cu2(OTf)2 were incapable of catalyzing such additions. The groups incorporated (for example, the 2-(methoxycarbonyl)ethenyl group that we name MocVinyl) serve as protecting groups for the above-mentioned heterocyclic CONH or CONHCO moieties. Deprotections were accomplished via exchange with good nucleophiles: the 1-dodecanethiolate anion turned out to be the most general and efficient reagent, but in some particular cases other nucleophiles also worked (e.g., MocVinyl-inosines can be cleaved with succinimide anion). Some structural and mechanistic details have been accounted for with the help of DFT and MP2 calculations
Retrato de Piazzolla. Reworkings of the music of Astor Piazzolla
Amor Quintet: Gabriele Faja, piano. Anne-Marie Curran, violin. Nikolai Ryskov, accordion. Sam Ryan, double bass. Milton Mermikides, guitar
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