23 research outputs found
Rare among rare: phenotypes of uncommon CMT genotypes
(1) Background: Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) is the most frequent form of inherited chronic motor and sensory polyneuropathy. Over 100 CMT causative genes have been identified. Previous reports found PMP22, GJB1, MPZ, and MFN2 as the most frequently involved genes. Other genes, such as BSCL2, MORC2, HINT1, LITAF, GARS, and autosomal dominant GDAP1 are responsible for only a minority of CMT cases. (2) Methods: we present here our records of CMT patients harboring a mutation in one of these rare genes (BSCL2, MORC2, HINT1, LITAF, GARS, autosomal dominant GDAP1). We studied 17 patients from 8 unrelated families. All subjects underwent neurologic evaluation and genetic testing by next-generation sequencing on an Ion Torrent PGM (Thermo Fischer) with a 44-gene custom panel. (3) Results: the following variants were found: BSCL2 c.263A > G p.Asn88Ser (eight subjects), MORC2 c.1503A > T p.Gln501His (one subject), HINT1 c.110G > C p.Arg37Pro (one subject), LITAF c.404C > G p.Pro135Arg (two subjects), GARS c.1660G > A p.Asp554Asn (three subjects), GDAP1 c.374G > A p.Arg125Gln (two subjects). (4) Expanding the spectrum of CMT phenotypes is of high relevance, especially for less common variants that have a higher risk of remaining undiagnosed. The necessity of reaching a genetic definition for most patients is great, potentially making them eligible for future experimentations
Role of inflammation and oxidative stress mediators in gliomas
Gliomas are the most common primary brain tumors of the central nervous
system. Despite relevant progress in conventional treatments, the prognosis of such tumors
remains almost invariably dismal. The genesis of gliomas is a complex, multistep process
that includes cellular neoplastic transformation, resistance to apoptosis, loss of control of
the cell cycle, angiogenesis, and the acquisition of invasive properties. Among a number of
different biomolecular events, the existence of molecular connections between
inflammation and oxidative stress pathways and the development of this cancer has been
demonstrated. In particular, the tumor microenvironment, which is largely orchestrated by
inflammatory molecules, is an indispensable participant in the neoplastic process,
promoting proliferation, survival and migration of such tumors. Proinflammatory
cytokines, such as tumor necrosis factor-alpha, interleukin-1beta, and interferon-gamma, as
well as chemokines and prostaglandins, are synthesized by resident brain cells and
lymphocytes invading the affected brain tissue. Key mediators of cancer progression
include nuclear factor-kappaB, reactive oxygen and nitrogen species, and specific
microRNAs. The collective activity of these mediators is largely responsible for a
pro-tumorigenic response through changes in cell proliferation, cell death, cellular
senescence, DNA mutation rates, DNA methylation and angiogenesis. We provide a
general overview of the connection between specific inflammation and oxidative stress
pathway molecules and gliomas. The elucidation of specific effects and interactions of
these factors may provide the opportunity for the identification of new target molecules
leading to improved diagnosis and treatment
Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease: experience from a large Italian tertiary neuromuscular center
Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease is the most common inherited neuromuscular disease. Thanks to the advances of the latest generation sequencing, more than 80 causative genes have been reported to date
Expression of the tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated factors I and 2 and regulation of the nuclear factor-kappa B antiapoptotic activity in human gliomas
Object. Tumor necrosis factor receptor (TNFR)\u2013associated factors (TRAFs) are a recently established group of proteins
involved in the intracellular signaling of the TNFR superfamily members. The TRAFs have been implicated in
promoting cell survival through the activation of transcription factor nuclear factor (NF)\u2013kB. The authors investigated
the expression of NF-kB, caspase 3, TRAF1, TRAF2, and TRAF-associated NF-kB activator/TRAF\u2013interacting
protein (TANK/I-TRAF), a regulator of TRAF activity, in human gliomas.
Methods. Tumor samples were obtained in 27 adult patients harboring seven low-grade gliomas, nine anaplastic astrocytomas,
and 11 glioblastomas multiforme. The NF-kB activation was analyzed using the electrophoresis mobility
shift assay; TRAF1, TRAF2, TANK/I-TRAF, and caspase 3 expression were studied using Western blot analysis.
Upregulated NF-kB DNA\u2013binding activity, compared with that in normal brain tissue, was detected in all tumor
samples (p = 0.002). The level of NF-kB activity showed some correlation with World Health Organization tumor
grades (p = 0.01), even though variable activity levels were demonstrated in relation to tissue heterogeneity, which resulted
in a substantial number of outliers in the quantitative analysis. Increased levels of TRAF1, TRAF2, and TANK/
I-TRAF were expressed in astrocytomas compared with levels in normal brain tissue (p = 0.02, 0.006, and 0.01, respectively).
Conclusions. Data in this study confirm the upregulation of NF-kB in gliomas and reveal a correlation between levels
of this transcription factor and tumor grade. A constitutive expression of TRAF1, TRAF2, and TANK/I-TRAF in
human gliomas was documented. These proteins are involved in the intracellular signal transduction of the TNFR superfamily
and in the control of NF-kB expression and its antiapoptotic activity
Expression of Sirtuins and BDNF, and sirt1-bdnf correlation in human astrocytomas of different grade
miR-21 and 221 upregulation and miR-181b downregulation in human grade II-IV astrocytic tumors
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small noncoding
regulatory RNAs that reduce stability and/or translation of
fully or partially sequence-complementary target mRNAs.
Recent evidence indicates that miRNAs can function both
as tumor suppressors and as oncogenes. It has been demonstrated
that in glioblastoma multiforme miR-21 and 221
are upregulated whereas miR-128 and 181 are downregulated.
Expression of miR-21, 221, 128a, 128b, 128c, 181a,
181b, 181c was studied using real-time quantitative reverse
transcriptase polymerase chain reaction and northern blotting
for human astrocytic tumors with different grade of
malignancy. miR-21 and 221 were overexpressed in glioma
samples, whereas miRNA 181b was downregulated compared
with normal brain tissue. miRNA-21 was
hyperexpressed in all tumor samples whereas higher levels
of miRNA-221 were found in high-grade gliomas. This
study is the first analysis of miRNAs in astrocytic tumor at
different stages of malignancy. The different expression
pattern observed in tumors at different stages ofmalignancy is probably dependent on the cell-specific
repertoire of target genes of tumors sharing different
molecular pathways activity and suggests miRNAs may
have also a place in diagnosis and staging of brain tumors