14 research outputs found
Inappropriately chelated iron in the cerebrospinal fluid of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis patients
ALS is characterized by oxidative damage in the brain and cerebrospinal fluid, which is exerted by pro-oxidative activity of iron. Such activity of iron can be drastically increased in the presence of inappropriate iron ligands that catalyze redox cycling of iron, thereby promoting hydroxyl radical generation. The aim of our study was to determine the relative level of inappropriate iron ligands in the cerebrospinal fluid of ALS patients. To determine the levels of inappropriate iron ligands and redox activity of iron in cerebrospinal fluid (10 samples from ALS patients and 10 controls), we applied electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. We have shown that cerebrospinal fluid of ALS patients comprises twofold increased level of inappropriate iron ligands, proportionally increasing iron redox activity and hydroxyl radical production compared to controls. In conclusion, our results strongly support the pro-oxidative/detrimental role of inappropriately chelated iron in ALS pathophysiology. The identification of biomolecules that form such iron complexes and their therapeutic targeting may represent the future of ALS treatment
Association between Cytotoxic T-Lymphocyte-Associated Antigen 4 (CTLA-4) Locus and Early-Onset Anti-acetylcholine Receptor-Positive Myasthenia Gravis in Serbian Patients
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have provided strong evidence that early- and late-onset MG have different genetic backgrounds. Recent in silico analysis based on GWAS results revealed rs231735 and rs231770 variants within CTLA-4 locus as possible MG causative genetic factors. We aimed to explore the association of rs231735 and rs231770 with MG in a representative cohort of Serbian patients. We conducted an age-, sex-, and ethnicity-matched case–control study. Using TaqMan allele discrimination assays, the frequency of rs231735 and rs231770 genetic variants was examined in 447 AChR-MG patients and 447 matched controls. There was no significant association of rs231735 and rs231770 with the entire MG cohort (P > 0.05). Nevertheless, when stratifying patients into early-onset (n = 183) and late-onset MG (n = 264), we found early-onset patients had a significantly lower frequency of the rs231735 allele T compared to controls (OR = 0.734, 95% CI = 0.575–0.938, p10e6 permutation < 0.05), and rs231735 genotype TT and rs231770 genotype TT had a protective effect on early-onset MG (OR = 0.548, 95% CI = 0.339–0.888, and OR = 0.563, 95% CI = 0.314–1.011, p10e6 permutation < 0.05). Consequently, we found that individuals with the rs231735-rs231770 haplotype GC had a higher risk for developing early-onset MG (OR = 1.360, P = 0.027, p10e6 permutation < 0.05). Our results suggest that CTLA-4 rs231735 and rs231770 may be risk factors only for patients with early-onset MG in Serbian population
Genetic alterations in quadruple malignancies of a patient with multiple sclerosis: their role in malignancy development and response to therapy
Multiple cancers represent 2.42\% of all human cancers and are mainly
double or triple cancers. Many possible causes of multiple malignancies
have been reported such as genetic alterations, exposure to anti-cancer
chemotherapy, radiotherapy, immunosuppressive therapy and reduced
immunologic response. We report a female patient with multiple sclerosis
and quadruple cancers of different embryological origin. Patient was
diagnosed with stage III (T3, N1a, MO) medullary thyroid carcinoma
(MTC), multicentric micropapillary thyroid carcinoma, scapular and
lumbar melanomas (Clark II, Breslow II), and lobular invasive breast
carcinoma (T1a, NO, MO). All tumors present in our patient except
micropapillary thyroid carcinomas were investigated for gene alterations
known to have a key role in cancer promotion and progression. Tumor
samples were screened for the p16 alterations (loss of heterozygosity
and homozygous deletions), loss of heterozygosity of PTEN, p53
alterations (mutational status and loss of heterozygosity) and
mutational status of RET, HRAS and KRAS. Each type of tumor investigated
had specific pattern of analyzed genetic alterations. The most prominent
genetic changes were mutual alterations in PTEN and p53 tumor
suppressors present in breast cancer and two melanomas. These
co-alterations could be crucial for promoting development of multiple
malignancies. Moreover the insertion in 4th codon of HRAS gene was
common for all tumor types investigated. It represents frameshift
mutation introducing stop codon at position 5 which prevents synthesis
of a full-length protein. Since the inactivated RAS enhances sensitivity
to tamoxifen and radiotherapy this genetic alteration could be
considered as a good prognostic factor for this patient.Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development of the
Republic of Serbia {[}III41031