13 research outputs found

    Death versus survival: functional interaction between the apoptotic and stress-inducible heat shock protein pathways

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    Induction of heat shock proteins (Hsps) following cellular damage can prevent apoptosis induced by both the intrinsic and the extrinsic pathways. The intrinsic pathway is characterized by mitochondrial outer membrane permeabilization (MOMP), cytochrome c release, apoptosome assembly, and caspase activation. Hsps promote cell survival by preventing MOMP or apoptosome formation as well as via regulation of Akt and JNK activities. Engagement of the TNF death receptors induces the extrinsic pathway that is characterized by Fas-associated death domain–dependent (FADD-dependent) caspase-8 activation or induction of NF-κB to promote cellular survival. Hsps can directly suppress proapoptotic signaling events or stabilizing elements of the NF-κB pathway to promote cellular survival

    A 'non-canonical' DNA-binding element mediates the response of the fas-ligand promoter to c-Myc

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    AbstractCell number is regulated by maintaining a balance between cell proliferation and cell death through apoptosis. Key regulators of this balance include the oncogene product c-Myc, which promotes either entry into the cell cycle or apoptosis [1]. Although the mechanism of c-Myc-induced apoptosis remains unclear, it is susceptible to regulation by survival factors [2,3] and can proceed through the interaction of Fas ligand (FasL) with its receptor, Fas [4]. Activated T lymphocytes are eliminated by an apoptotic process known as activation-induced cell death (AICD), which requires the transcriptional induction of FasL expression [5–7] and sustained levels of c-Myc [8]. The FasL promoter can be driven by c-Myc overexpression, and functional inhibitors of Myc and its binding partner, Max, inhibit the transcriptional activity of the FasL promoter [9,10]. We identified a non-canonical binding site (ATTCTCT) for c-Myc–Max heterodimers in the FasL promoter, which, when mutated, abolished activity in response to c-Myc. Exchange of the canonical c-Myc responsive elements (CACGTG) in the ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) promoter [11] with the non-canonical sequence in the FasL promoter generated an ODC–FasL promoter that was significantly more responsive to c-Myc than the wild-type ODC promoter. Our findings identify a precise physiological role for c-Myc in the induction of apoptosis as a transcriptional regulator of the FasL gene

    Contraceptive Use and Pregnancy Outcomes among Opioid Drug-Using Women: A Retrospective Cohort Study

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    Objective The contraceptive needs of illicit opioid users differ from non-drug users but are poorly understood. The aim of this study was to describe contraceptive use and pregnancy outcomes in opioid-using women, and to examine their association with a range of risk factors. Method This retrospective cohort study used UK general practice records, Treatment Outcomes Profile and National Drug Treatment Monitoring System data, and a nested data validation exercise. A cohort of 376 women aged 20–61 years were in active treatment for opioid addiction in October 2010 at two specialised primary care practices in North-East England. Outcomes were age-adjusted prevalence estimates for contraceptive use and pregnancy outcomes in users of illicit opioids. The association between lifestyle-related risk factors and contraception was explored. Results Drug-using women made lower use of planned (non-condom) contraception (24% vs 50%, p<0.001), had more frequent pregnancy terminations (0.46 vs. 0.025, p = 0.004) and higher annual incidence of chlamydia (1.1% vs. 0.33%, p<0.001), when compared with age-matched population data. Specifically, there was low use of oral contraceptives (4% vs. 25%, p<0.001), IUCD (1% vs. 6%, p<0.001), and sterilisation (7% vs. 6%, p = 0.053), but higher rates of injectable contraceptives (6% vs. 3%, p = 0.003). A total of 64% of children aged <16 years born to this group did not live with their mother. No individual risk factor (such as sex-working) significantly explained the lower use or type of non-condom contraception. Conclusions This is the first study to describe planned contraceptive use among drug-users, as well as the association with a range of risk factors and pregnancy outcomes. The low uptake of planned contraception, set against high rates of terminations and sexually transmitted disease demonstrates the urgent clinical need to improve contraceptive services, informed by qualitative work to explore the values and beliefs influencing low contraceptive uptake

    Family composition according to mean (median/Interquartile range) number of children per age band.

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    <p>Family composition according to mean (median/Interquartile range) number of children per age band.</p

    Characterization of Cytoplasmic Caspase-2 Activation by Induced Proximity

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    Caspase-2 is an initiator caspase activated in response to heat shock and other stressors that induce apoptosis. Activation of caspase-2 requires induced proximity resulting after recruitment to caspase-2 activation complexes such as the PIDDosome. We have adapted bimolecular fluorescence complementation (BiFC) to measure caspase-2 induced proximity in real time in single cells. Nonfluorescent fragments of the fluorescent protein Venus that can associate to reform the fluorescent complex were fused to caspase-2, allowing visualization and kinetic measurements of caspase-2 induced proximity after heat shock and other stresses. This revealed that the caspase-2 activation platform occurred in the cytosol and not in the nucleus in response to heat shock, DNA damage, cytoskeletal disruption, and other treatments. Activation, as measured by this approach, in response to heat shock was RAIDD dependent and upstream of mitochondrial outer-membrane permeabilization. Furthermore, we identify Hsp90alpha as a key negative regulator of heat shock-induced caspase-2 activation
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