50 research outputs found

    DHA Supplemented in Peptamen Diet Offers No Advantage in Pathways to Amyloidosis: Is It Time to Evaluate Composite Lipid Diet?

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    Numerous reports have documented the beneficial effects of dietary docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) on beta-amyloid production and Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, none of these studies have examined and compared DHA, in combination with other dietary nutrients, for its effects on plaque pathogenesis. Potential interactions of DHA with other dietary nutrients and fatty acids are conventionally ignored. Here we investigated DHA with two dietary regimes; peptamen (pep+DHA) and low fat diet (low fat+DHA). Peptamen base liquid diet is a standard sole-source nutrition for patients with gastrointestinal dysfunction. Here we demonstrate that a robust AD transgenic mouse model shows an increased tendency to produce beta-amyloid peptides and amyloid plaques when fed a pep+DHA diet. The increase in beta-amyloid peptides was due to an elevated trend in the levels of beta-secretase amyloid precursor protein (APP) cleaving enzyme (BACE), the proteolytic C-terminal fragment beta of APP and reduced levels of insulin degrading enzyme that endoproteolyse beta-amyloid. On the contrary, TgCRND8 mice on low fat+DHA diet (based on an approximately 18% reduction of fat intake) ameliorate the production of abeta peptides and consequently amyloid plaques. Our work not only demonstrates that DHA when taken with peptamen may have a tendency to confer a detrimental affect on the amyloid plaque build up but also reinforces the importance of studying composite lipids or nutrients rather than single lipids or nutrients for their effects on pathways important to plaque development

    The Molecular Identification of Organic Compounds in the Atmosphere: State of the Art and Challenges

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    Contractile responses of smooth muscle cells differentiated from rat neural stem cells

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    To characterize the functional differentiation of neural stem cells into smooth muscle cells, multipotent stem cells in the central nervous system (CNS) were isolated from rat embryonic day 14 (E14) cortex and cultured by neurosphere formation in serum-free medium in the presence of 10 ng ml−1 of basic fibroblast growth factor. Differentiation was induced by the addition of 10 % fetal bovine serum to low-density cultures (2.5 × 103 cells cm−2). Immunological analyses and reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction indicated that the differentiated cells expressed smooth-muscle-specific marker proteins such as SM-1, SM-2, and SMemb myosin heavy chains, SM-22, basic calponin and α-smooth-muscle actin, but not the astrocyte marker glial fibrillary acidic protein. To examine whether smooth-muscle-like cells that are differentiated from CNS stem cells possess the characteristics of contractile smooth muscle, we prepared reconstituted collagen gel fibres and measured their contractile tension. The reconstituted fibres were prepared by thermal gelation of collagen and the differentiated cells. The fibres contracted in response to treatment with KCl (80 mm), ACh (100 μm), endothelin-1 (10 nm), endothelin-2 (10 nm), and prostaglandin F2α (100 μm). ACh-induced contraction was partially inhibited by the L-type voltage-dependent Ca2+ channel inhibitor nifedipine and by the intracellular Ca2+ chelator 1,2-bis (2-aminophenoxy) ethane-N,N,N’,N'-tetraacetic acid acetoxymethyl ester, the myosin light chain kinase inhibitor ML-9, the Rho kinase inhibitor Y-27632, dibutyryl cAMP and 8-bromo-cGMP. These results suggest that CNS stem cells give rise to smooth muscle cells in vitro that have an identical contractile function to smooth muscle in vivo
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