78 research outputs found

    Physical and optical aerosol properties at the Dutch North Sea coast based on AERONET observations

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    International audienceSun photometer measurements at the AERONET station at the North Sea coast in The Hague (The Netherlands) provide a climatology of optical and physical aerosol properties for the area. Results are presented from the period January 2002 to July 2003. For the analysis and interpretation these data are coupled to chemical aerosol data from a nearby station of the Dutch National Air Quality Network. This network provides PM10 and black carbon concentrations. Meteorological conditions and air mass trajectories are also used. Due to the location close to the coast, the results are strongly dependent on wind direction, i.e. air mass trajectory. In general the aerosol optical properties are governed by industrial aerosol emitted form various industrial, agricultural and urban areas surrounding the site in almost all directions over land. For maritime air masses industrial aerosols are transported from over the North Sea, whereas very clean air is transported from the NW in clean polar air masses from the North Atlantic. In the winter the effect of the production of sea salt aerosol at high wind speeds is visible in the optical and physical aerosol data. In these cases fine and coarse mode radii are similar to those reported in the literature for marine aerosol. Relations are derived between the Ångström coefficients with both the fine/coarse mode fraction and the ratio of black carbon and PM10

    Physical and optical aerosol properties at the Dutch North Sea coast

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    International audienceSun photometer measurements at the AERONET station at the North Sea coast in The Hague (The Netherlands) provide a climatology of optical and physical aerosol properties for the area. Results are presented from the period January 2002 to July 2003. For the analysis and interpretation these data are coupled to chemical aerosol data from a nearby station of the Dutch National Air Quality Network. This network provides PM10 and black carbon concentrations. Meteorological conditions and air mass trajectories are also used. Due to the location close to the coast, the results are strongly dependent on wind direction, i.e.~air mass trajectory. In general the aerosol optical properties are governed by industrial aerosol emitted form various industrial, agricultural and urban areas surrounding the site in almost all directions over land. For maritime air masses industrial aerosols are transported from over the North Sea, whereas very clean air is transported from the NW in clean polar air masses from the North Atlantic. In the winter the effect of the production of sea salt aerosol at high wind speeds is visible in the optical and physical aerosol data. In these cases fine and coarse mode radii are similar to those reported in the literature for marine aerosol. Relations are derived between the Ångström coefficients with both the fine/coarse mode fraction and the ratio of black carbon and PM10

    Posttranslational modifications of calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase IIdelta and its downstream signaling in human failing hearts

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    BACKGROUND: In human failing hearts (HF) of different origin (coronary artery disease-CAD, dilated-DCM, restrictive and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy-OTHER), we investigated the active forms of Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase IIdelta (p-Thr287-CaMKIIdelta, oxMet281/282-CaMKIIdelta) and their role in phenotypes of the disease. METHODS AND RESULTS: Although basic diagnostic and clinical markers indicating the attenuated cardiac contractility and remodeling were comparable in HF groups, CaMKIIdelta-mediated axis was different. P-Thr287-CaMKIIdelta was unaltered in CAD group, whereas it was upregulated in non-ischemic cardiomyopathic groups. No correlation between the upregulated p-Thr287-CaMKIIdelta and QT interval prolongation was detected. Unlike in DCM, oxMet281/282-CaMKIIdelta did not differ among HF groups. Independently of CaMKIIdelta phosphorylation/oxidation, activation of its downstreams-phospholamban and cardiac myosin binding protein-C was significantly downregulated supporting both diminished cardiac lusitropy and inotropy in all hearts. Content of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase 2a in all HF was unchanged. Protein phosphatase1beta was upregulated in CAD and DCM only, while 2A did not differ among groups. CONCLUSION: This is the first demonstration that the posttranslational activation of CaMKIIdelta differs in HF depending on etiology. Lower levels of downstream molecular targets of CaMKIIdelta do not correlate with either activation of CaMKIIdelta or the expression of major protein phosphatases in the HF. Thus, it is unlikely that these mechanisms exclusively underlie failing of the heart

    DNA double strand breaks repair and apoptosis induction in peripheral blood lymphocytes of head and neck cancer patients

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    Aim: To evaluate the generation and repair of DNA double strand breaks (DSBs) as a critical factors that define the efficiency of radiation therapy of cancer patients. Methods: Peripheral blood lymphocytes obtained from 18 patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) and 18 healthy donors were studied. The efficiency of DSBs repair after genotoxic treatment with hydrogen peroxide and γ-radiation were examined by neutral comet assay. MTT assay was used for cell viability analysis and Annexin V-FITC kit specific for kinase-3 was employed to determine apoptosis. Results: Lymphocytes from HNSCC patients were sensitive to genotoxic treatment and displayed impaired DSBs repair. Finally, as a consequence of this finding we have evidenced higher rate of apoptosis induction after γ-radiation treatment of lymphocytes from HNSCC patients than those from healthy controls. Conclusions: DSBs repair and increased apoptosis in cells of patients with head and neck cancer is relevant for efficient therapy of HNSCC

    Alternative Splicing of NOX4 in the Failing Human Heart

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    Increased oxidative stress is a major contributor to the development and progression of heart failure, however, our knowledge on the role of the distinct NADPH oxidase (NOX) isoenzymes, especially on NOX4 is controversial. Therefore, we aimed to characterize NOX4 expression in human samples from healthy and failing hearts. Explanted human heart samples (left and right ventricular, and septal regions) were obtained from patients suffering from heart failure of ischemic or dilated origin. Control samples were obtained from donor hearts that were not used for transplantation. Deep RNA sequencing of the cardiac transcriptome indicated extensive alternative splicing of the NOX4 gene in heart failure as compared to samples from healthy donor hearts. Long distance PCR analysis with a universal 5'-3' end primer pair, allowing amplification of different splice variants, confirmed the presence of the splice variants. To assess translation of the alternatively spliced transcripts we determined protein expression of NOX4 by using a specific antibody recognizing a conserved region in all variants. Western blot analysis showed up-regulation of the full-length NOX4 in ischemic cardiomyopathy samples and confirmed presence of shorter isoforms both in control and failing samples with disease-associated expression pattern. We describe here for the first time that NOX4 undergoes extensive alternative splicing in human hearts which gives rise to the expression of different enzyme isoforms. The full length NOX4 is significantly upregulated in ischemic cardiomyopathy suggesting a role for NOX4 in ROS production during heart failure

    Novel Interactions between Actin and the Proteasome Revealed by Complex Haploinsufficiency

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    Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been a powerful model for uncovering the landscape of binary gene interactions through whole-genome screening. Complex heterozygous interactions are potentially important to human genetic disease as loss-of-function alleles are common in human genomes. We have been using complex haploinsufficiency (CHI) screening with the actin gene to identify genes related to actin function and as a model to determine the prevalence of CHI interactions in eukaryotic genomes. Previous CHI screening between actin and null alleles for non-essential genes uncovered ∼240 deleterious CHI interactions. In this report, we have extended CHI screening to null alleles for essential genes by mating a query strain to sporulations of heterozygous knock-out strains. Using an act1Δ query, knock-outs of 60 essential genes were found to be CHI with actin. Enriched in this collection were functional categories found in the previous screen against non-essential genes, including genes involved in cytoskeleton function and chaperone complexes that fold actin and tubulin. Novel to this screen was the identification of genes for components of the TFIID transcription complex and for the proteasome. We investigated a potential role for the proteasome in regulating the actin cytoskeleton and found that the proteasome physically associates with actin filaments in vitro and that some conditional mutations in proteasome genes have gross defects in actin organization. Whole-genome screening with actin as a query has confirmed that CHI interactions are important phenotypic drivers. Furthermore, CHI screening is another genetic tool to uncover novel functional connections. Here we report a previously unappreciated role for the proteasome in affecting actin organization and function

    Tyrosine Nitration of PA700 Links Proteasome Activation to Endothelial Dysfunction in Mouse Models with Cardiovascular Risk Factors

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    Oxidative stress is believed to cause endothelial dysfunction, an early event and a hallmark in cardiovascular diseases (CVD) including hypertension, diabetes, and dyslipidemia. However, the targets for oxidative stress-mediated endothelial dysfunction in CVD have not been completely elucidated. Here we report that 26S proteasome activation by peroxynitrite (ONOO−) is a common pathway for endothelial dysfunction in mouse models of diabetes, hypertension, and dyslipidemia. Endothelial function, assayed by acetylcholine-induced vasorelaxation, was impaired in parallel with significantly increased 26S proteasome activity in aortic homogenates from streptozotocin (STZ)-induced type I diabetic mice, angiotensin-infused hypertensive mice, and high fat-diets -fed LDL receptor knockout (LDLr−/−) mice. The elevated 26S proteasome activities were accompanied by ONOO−-mediated PA700/S10B nitration and increased 26S proteasome assembly and caused accelerated degradation of molecules (such as GTPCH I and thioredoxin) essential to endothelial homeostasis. Pharmacological (administration of MG132) or genetic inhibition (siRNA knockdown of PA700/S10B) of the 26S proteasome blocked the degradation of the vascular protective molecules and ablated endothelial dysfunction induced by diabetes, hypertension, and western diet feeding. Taken together, these results suggest that 26S proteasome activation by ONOO−-induced PA700/S10B tyrosine nitration is a common route for endothelial dysfunction seen in mouse models of hypertension, diabetes, and dyslipidemia
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