59 research outputs found
Autophagy occurs upstream or parallel to the apoptosome during histolytic cell death
Histolysis refers to a widespread disintegration of tissues that is morphologically distinct from apoptosis and often associated with the stimulation of autophagy. Here, we establish that a component of the apoptosome, and pivotal regulator of apoptosis, is also required for histolytic cell death. Using in vivo and ex vivo assays, we demonstrate a global apoptogenic requirement for dark, the fly ortholog of Apaf1, and show that a required focus of dark– organismal lethality maps to the central nervous system. We further
demonstrate that the Dark protein itself is a caspase substrate and find that alterations of this cleavage site produced the first hypermorphic point mutation within the Apaf1/Ced-4 gene family. In a model of ‘autophagic cell death’, dark was essential for histolysis but dispensable for characteristic features of the autophagic program, indicating that the induction of autophagy occurs upstream or parallel to histolytic cell death. These results demonstrate that stimulation of autophagy per se is not a ‘killing event’ and, at the same time, establish that common effector pathways, regulated by the apoptosome, can underlie morphologically distinct forms of programmed cell death
Influence of the biotope on the tick infestation of cattle and on the tick-borne pathogen repertoire of cattle ticks in Ethiopia
Background:
The majority of vector-borne infections occur in the tropics, including Africa, but molecular eco-
epidemiological studies are seldom reported from these regions. In particular, most previously published data on ticks in
Ethiopia focus on species distribution, and only a few molecular studies on the occurrence of tick-borne pathogens or on
ecological factors influencing these. The present study was undertaken to evaluate, if ticks collected from cattle in different
Ethiopian biotopes harbour (had access to) different pathogens.
Methods:
In South-Western Ethiopia 1032 hard ticks were removed from cattle grazing in three kinds of tick biotopes. DNA
was individually extracted from one specimen of both sexes of each tick species per cattle. These samples were molecularly
analysed for the presence of tick-borne pathogens.
Results:
Amblyomma variegatum
was significantly more abundant on mid highland, than on moist highland.
Rhipicephalus
decoloratus
was absent from savannah lowland, where virtually only
A. cohaerens
was found. In the ticks
Coxiella burnetii
had
the highest prevalence on savannah lowland. PCR positivity to
Theileria
spp. did not appear to depend on the biotope, but
some genotypes were unique to certain tick species. Significantly more
A. variegatum
specimens were rickettsia-positive,
than those of other tick species. The presence of rickettsiae (
R. africae
) appeared to be associated with mid highland in case
of
A. variegatum
and
A. cohaerens
. The low level of haemoplasma positivity seemed to be equally distributed among the tick
species, but was restricted to one biotope type.
Conclusions:
The tick biotope, in which cattle are grazed, will influence not only the tick burden of these hosts, but also the
spectrum of pathogens in their ticks. Thus, the presence of pathogens with alternative (non-tick-borne) transmission routes,
with transstadial or with transovarial transmission by ticks appeared to be associated with the biotope type, with the tick
species, or both, respectively
Development of Population Tariffs for the CarerQol Instrument for Hungary, Poland and Slovenia
__Background:__ The CarerQol instrument can be used in economic evaluations to measure the care-related quality of life of informal caregivers. Tariff sets are available for Australia, Germany, Sweden, the Netherlands, the UK, and the USA.
__Objective:__ Our objective was to develop tariff sets for the CarerQol instrument for Hungary, Poland and Slovenia and to compare these with the existing value sets.
__Methods:__ Discrete-choice experiments were carried out in Hungary, Poland and Slovenia. Data were collected through an online survey between November 2018 and January 2019, using representative samples of 1000 respondents per country. Tariffs were calculated from coefficient estimates from panel mixed multinomial logit models with random parameters.
__Results:__ All seven CarerQol domains contributed significantly to the utility associated with different caregiving situations. Attributes valued highest were ‘physical health
Peptide Models - XXIV: An ab Initio Study on N-formyl-l-prolinamide With Trans Peptide Bond. The Existence or Non-existence of Alpha(l) And Epsilon(l) Conformations
N-formyl-L-prolinamide was subjected to geometry optimization at three levels of theory: HF/3-21G, HF/6-31G (d) and B3LYP/6-31G (d). At all three levels of computation the global minimum was gamma(L) (inverse gamma-Turn) backbone conformation with two ring-puckered forms "UP" and "DOWN". At HF/3-21G level of theory three backbone conformations were found gamma(L), epsilon(L), and alpha(L). At higher levels of theory the epsilon(L), and alpha(L) conformations disappeared. The ''UP'' and ''DOWN'' ring-puckered forms, in the gamma(L) backbone conformation, led to practically identical vibrational spectra at the B3LYP/6-31G (d) level of theory
A Novel Pathway Regulates Thyroid Hormone Availability in Rat and Human Hypothalamic Neurosecretory Neurons
Hypothalamic neurosecretory systems are fundamental regulatory circuits influenced by thyroid hormone. Monocarboxylate-transporter-8 (MCT8)-mediated uptake of thyroid hormone followed by type 3 deiodinase (D3)-catalyzed inactivation represent limiting regulatory factors of neuronal T3 availability. In the present study we addressed the localization and subcellular distribution of D3 and MCT8 in neurosecretory neurons and addressed D3 function in their axons. Intense D3-immunoreactivity was observed in axon varicosities in the external zone of the rat median eminence and the neurohaemal zone of the human infundibulum containing axon terminals of hypophysiotropic parvocellular neurons. Immuno-electronmicroscopy localized D3 to dense-core vesicles in hypophysiotropic axon varicosities. N-STORM-superresolution-microscopy detected the active center containing C-terminus of D3 at the outer surface of these organelles. Double-labeling immunofluorescent confocal microscopy revealed that D3 is present in the majority of GnRH, CRH and GHRH axons but only in a minority of TRH axons, while absent from somatostatin-containing neurons. Bimolecular-Fluorescence-Complementation identified D3 homodimers, a prerequisite for D3 activity, in processes of GT1-7 cells. Furthermore, T3-inducible D3 catalytic activity was detected in the rat median eminence. Triple-labeling immunofluorescence and immuno-electronmicroscopy revealed the presence of MCT8 on the surface of the vast majority of all types of hypophysiotropic terminals. The presence of MCT8 was also demonstrated on the axon terminals in the neurohaemal zone of the human infundibulum. The unexpected role of hypophysiotropic axons in fine-tuned regulation of T3 availability in these cells via MCT8-mediated transport and D3-catalyzed inactivation may represent a novel regulatory core mechanism for metabolism, growth, stress and reproduction in rodents and humans
LIFEStyle, prevention and risk of Acute PaNcreatitis (LIFESPAN): protocol of a multicentre and multinational observational case-control study
Introduction Acute pancreatitis (AP) is a life-threatening inflammatory disease of the exocrine pancreas which needs acute hospitalisation. Despite its importance, we have significant lack of knowledge whether the lifestyle factors elevate or decrease the risk of AP or influence the disease outcome. So far, no synthetising study has been carried out examining associations between socioeconomic factors, dietary habits, physical activity, chronic stress, sleep quality and AP. Accordingly, LIFESPAN identifies risk factors of acute pancreatitis and helps to prepare preventive recommendations for lifestyle elements.
Methods and analysis LIFESPAN is an observational, multicentre international case–control study. Participating subjects will create case and control groups. The study protocol was designed according to the SPIRIT guideline. Patients in the case group (n=1700) have suffered from AP (alcohol-induced, n=500; biliary, n=500; hypertriglyceridemiainduced, n=200; other, n=500); the control group subjects have no AP in their medical history. Our study will have three major control groups (n=2200): hospital-based (n=500), population-based (n=500) and aetiology-based (alcohol, n=500; biliary, n=500 and hypertriglyceridemia, n=200). All of them will be matched to the case group individually by gender, age and location of residence. Aggregately, 3900 subjects will be enrolled into the study. The study participants will complete a complex questionnaire with the help of a clinical research administrator/study nurse. Analysis methods include analysis of the continuous and categorical values.
Ethics and dissemination The study has obtained the relevant ethical approval (54175-2/2018/EKU) and also internationally registered (ISRCTN25940508). After obtaining the final conclusions, we will publish the data to the medical community and will also disseminate our results via open access
Relevance of the light signaling machinery for cellulase expression in trichoderma reesei (hypocrea jecorina)
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>In nature, light is one of the most important environmental cues that fungi perceive and interpret. It is known not only to influence growth and conidiation, but also cellulase gene expression. We therefore studied the relevance of the main components of the light perception machinery of <it>Trichoderma reesei </it>(<it>Hypocrea jecorina</it>), ENV1, BLR1 and BLR2, for production of plant cell wall degrading enzymes in fermentations aimed at efficient biosynthesis of enzyme mixtures for biofuel production.</p> <p>Findings</p> <p>Our results indicate that despite cultivation in mostly dark conditions, all three components show an influence on cellulase expression. While we found the performance of the enzyme mixture secreted by a deletion mutant in <it>env1 </it>to be enhanced, the higher cellulolytic activity observed for <it>Δblr2 </it>is mainly due to an increased secretion capacity of this strain. <it>Δblr1 </it>showed enhanced biomass accumulation, but due to its obviously lower secretion capacity still was the least efficient strain in this study.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>We conclude that with respect to regulation of plant cell wall degrading enzymes, the blue light regulator proteins are unlikely to act as a complex. Their regulatory influence on cellulase biosynthesis involves an alteration of protein secretion, which may be due to adjustment of transcription or posttranscriptional regulation of upstream factors. In contrast, the regulatory function of ENV1 seems to involve adjustment of enzyme proportions to environmental conditions.</p
Common Genetic Variants of the Human Steroid 21-Hydroxylase Gene (CYP21A2) Are Related to Differences in Circulating Hormone Levels
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.Hungarian Scientific Research Fund (OTKA, PD100648 (AP)) Technology Innovation Fund, National Developmental Agency (KTIA-AIK-2012-12-1-0010). AP is the recipient of a “Lendület” grant from the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Ghrelin Modulates the fMRI BOLD Response of Homeostatic and Hedonic Brain Centers Regulating Energy Balance in the Rat
The orexigenic gut-brain peptide, ghrelin and its G-protein coupled receptor, the growth hormone secretagogue receptor
1a (GHS-R1A) are pivotal regulators of hypothalamic feeding centers and reward processing neuronal circuits of the brain.
These systems operate in a cooperative manner and receive a wide array of neuronal hormone/transmitter messages and
metabolic signals. Functional magnetic resonance imaging was employed in the current study to map BOLD responses to
ghrelin in different brain regions with special reference on homeostatic and hedonic regulatory centers of energy balance.
Experimental groups involved male, ovariectomized female and ovariectomized estradiol-replaced rats. Putative modulation
of ghrelin signaling by endocannabinoids was also studied. Ghrelin-evoked effects were calculated as mean of the BOLD
responses 30 minutes after administration. In the male rat, ghrelin evoked a slowly decreasing BOLD response in all studied
regions of interest (ROI) within the limbic system. This effect was antagonized by pretreatment with GHS-R1A antagonist
JMV2959. The comparison of ghrelin effects in the presence or absence of JMV2959 in individual ROIs revealed significant
changes in the prefrontal cortex, nucleus accumbens of the telencephalon, and also within hypothalamic centers like the
lateral hypothalamus, ventromedial nucleus, paraventricular nucleus and suprachiasmatic nucleus. In the female rat, the
ghrelin effects were almost identical to those observed in males. Ovariectomy and chronic estradiol replacement had no
effect on the BOLD response. Inhibition of the endocannabinoid signaling by rimonabant significantly attenuated the
response of the nucleus accumbens and septum. In summary, ghrelin can modulate hypothalamic and mesolimbic
structures controlling energy balance in both sexes. The endocannabinoid signaling system contributes to the
manifestation of ghrelin’s BOLD effect in a region specific manner. In females, the estradiol milieu does not influence the
BOLD response to ghrelin
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