1,661 research outputs found
Cycloadditions of cyclohexynes and cyclopentyne.
We report the strategic use of cyclohexyne and the more elusive intermediate, cyclopentyne, as a tool for the synthesis of new heterocyclic compounds. Experimental and computational studies of a 3-substituted cyclohexyne are also described. The observed regioselectivities are explained by the distortion/interaction model
Insulin and GLP-1 infusions demonstrate the onset of adipose-specific insulin resistance in a large fasting mammal: potential glucogenic role for GLP-1.
Prolonged food deprivation increases lipid oxidation and utilization, which may contribute to the onset of the insulin resistance associated with fasting. Because insulin resistance promotes the preservation of glucose and oxidation of fat, it has been suggested to be an adaptive response to food deprivation. However, fasting mammals exhibit hypoinsulinemia, suggesting that the insulin resistance-like conditions they experience may actually result from reduced pancreatic sensitivity to glucose/capacity to secrete insulin. To determine whether fasting results in insulin resistance or in pancreatic dysfunction, we infused early- and late-fasted seals (naturally adapted to prolonged fasting) with insulin (0.065 U/kg), and a separate group of late-fasted seals with low (10 pM/kg) or high (100 pM/kg) dosages of glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) immediately following a glucose bolus (0.5g/kg), and measured the systemic and cellular responses. Because GLP-1 facilitates glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, these infusions provide a method to assess pancreatic insulin-secreting capacity. Insulin infusions increased the phosphorylation of insulin receptor and Akt in adipose and muscle of early and late fasted seals; however the timing of the signaling response was blunted in adipose of late fasted seals. Despite the dose-dependent increases in insulin and increased glucose clearance (high dose), both GLP-1 dosages produced increases in plasma cortisol and glucagon, which may have contributed to the glucogenic role of GLP-1. Results suggest that fasting induces adipose-specific insulin resistance in elephant seal pups, while maintaining skeletal muscle insulin sensitivity, and therefore suggests that the onset of insulin resistance in fasting mammals is an evolved response to cope with prolonged food deprivation
Standardization of molecular monitoring for chronic myeloid leukemia in Latin America using locally produced secondary cellular calibrators
Residual disease in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) patients undergoing therapy with tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) is measured by assessing the quantity of transcripts of the BCR-ABL1 fusion gene in peripheral white blood cells. This analysis is based on reverse-transcription quantitative PCR (RTâqPCR) technology; however, the wide array of methods used worldwide has led to large variation in quantitative BCR-ABL1 measurements, which hamper inter-laboratory comparative studiesFil: Ruiz, MarĂa Sol. FundaciĂłn CĂĄncer. Centro de Investigaciones OncolĂłgicas; ArgentinaFil: Medina, M.. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas. Instituto de Medicina Experimental. Academia Nacional de Medicina de Buenos Aires. Instituto de Medicina Experimental; ArgentinaFil: Tapia, I.. FundaciĂłn CĂĄncer. Centro de Investigaciones OncolĂłgicas; ArgentinaFil: Mordoh, Jose. FundaciĂłn CĂĄncer. Centro de Investigaciones OncolĂłgicas; ArgentinaFil: Cross, N. C. P.. Universidad de Southampton Uk; Reino UnidoFil: Larripa, Irene Beatriz. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas. Instituto de Medicina Experimental. Academia Nacional de Medicina de Buenos Aires. Instituto de Medicina Experimental; ArgentinaFil: Bianchini, Michele. FundaciĂłn CĂĄncer. Centro de Investigaciones OncolĂłgicas; Argentin
Sensitivity of polyamine metabolism to glucose deprivation is increased in neuroblastoma cells with N-myc amplification
Ornithine-derived polyamines are essential for cell proliferation, and their levels are elevated in many human tumors. Neuroblastoma, the most frequent extra-cranial solid tumor in children, harbors amplification of n-myc oncogene (which enhances polyamine metabolism) in 25% of the cases. In the present communication, the relevance of n-myc amplification in several metabolic features of human neuroblastoma cell lines is studied. A previously unknown linkage between glycolysis impairment and polyamine reduction, related to n-myc amplification, is unveiled. Results show that glycolysis inhibition is able to trigger signaling events leading to the reduction of N-Myc protein levels and subsequent decrease of both ornithine decarboxylase expression and polyamine levels, accompanied by cell cycle blockade preceding cell death. Metabolism-targeted therapies are emerging as new approaches for cancer treatment. New anti-tumor strategies could take advantage of the direct relationship between glucose deprivation and PA metabolism impairment leading to cell death described in the present work, and its apparent dependence on n-myc amplification in the case of neuroblastoma. Combined therapies targeting glucose metabolism and polyamine synthesis could be effective in the treatment of n-myc amplified tumors.Universidad de MĂĄlaga. Campus de Excelencia Internacional AndalucĂa Tech. This work has been funded by Grants SAF2011-26518 (Ministerio de EconomĂa y Competitividad, Spain), Excellence Projects CTS-1507 and CVI-06585 (Junta de AndalucĂa, Spain) and BIO-267 (fondos PAIDI, Junta de AndalucĂa, Spain). MVRP was the recipient of a FPU long-term fellowship (Ministerio de EducaciĂłn, Cultura y Deporte, Spain) and a âIII Plan Propio de InvestigaciĂłnâ short-term fellowship (University of MĂĄlaga). CIBERER is an initiative of Instituto de Salud Carlos III. This communication has the support of a travel grant "Universidad de MĂĄlaga. Campus de Excelencia Internacional AndalucĂa Tech"
The provenance of Late Ediacaran and Early Ordovician siliciclastic rocks in the
UâPb geochronology of detrital zircon from Late Ediacaran (Beiras Group greywackes) and Early Ordovician
(Sarnelhas arkosic quartzites and Armorican quartzites of Penacova) sedimentary rocks of the
southwest Central Iberian Zone (SW CIZ) constrain the evolution of northern Gondwana active-passive
margin transition. The LA-ICP-MS UâPb data set (375 detrital zircons with 90â110% concordant ages) is
dominated by Neoproterozoic ages (75% for the greywakes and 60% for the quartzites), among which the
main age cluster (more significant for Beiras Group greywackes) is Cryogenian (c.840â750 Ma), while a
few Mesoproterozoic and Tonian ages are also present (percentages <8%). These two features, and the
predominance of Cryogenian ages over Ediacaran ages, distinguish the Beiras Group greywackes (SW
CIZ) from the time-equivalent Serie Negra (Ossa-Morena Zone â OMZ), with which they are in inferred
contact. The age spectra of the Beiras Group greywackes also reveal three major episodes of zircon crystallisation
in the source area during the Neoproterozoic that are probably associated with a long-lived
system of magmatism that developed either along or in the vicinity of the northern Gondwana margin
at: (1) c. 850â700 Ma â Pan-African suture (not well represented in OMZ); (2) c. 700â635 Ma â early
Cadomian arc; and (3) c. 635â545 Ma â late Cadomian arc. Comparison of Neoproterozoic ages and those
of the Paleoproterozoic (c. 2â1.8 Ga) and Archean (mainly Neoarchean â 2.8â2.6 Ga, but also older) in the
Beiras Group greywackes with UâPb ages of Cadomian correlatives shows that: (1) SW CIZ, OMZ, Saxo-
Thuringian Zone, North Armorican Cadomian Belt and Anti-Atlas) evolved together during the formation
of back-arc basins on the northern Gondwana active margin and (2) all recorded synorogenic basins that
were filled during the Ediacaran by detritus resulting from erosion of the West African craton, the Pan-
African suture and a long-lived Cadomian magmatic arc. Differences in detrital zircon age populations in
the greywackes of the Beiras Group (SW CIZ Cadomian basement) and the Serie Negra (OMZ Cadomian
basement) are also observed in their respective overlying Early Ordovician quartzites. Since both these
SW Iberia Cadomian basements evolved together along the active margin of Gondwana (but sufficiently
separated to account for the differences in their detrital zircon content), this continuation of differing
zircon populations into the Early Ordovician suggests that the inferred contact presently juxtaposing
the Beiras Group and the Serie Negra is not pre-Early Ordovician and so is unlikely to demonstrate a
Cadomian suture
Biotinylated Cell-penetrating Peptides to Study Intracellular Protein-protein Interactions
[EN] Here we present a protocol to study intracellular protein-protein interactions that is based on the widely used biotin-avidin pull-down system.
The modification presented includes the combination of this technique with cell-penetrating sequences. We propose to design cell-penetrating
baits that can be incubated with living cells instead of cell lysates and therefore the interactions found will reflect those that occur within the
intracellular context. Connexin43 (Cx43), a protein that forms gap junction channels and hemichannels is down-regulated in high-grade gliomas.
The Cx43 region comprising amino acids 266-283 is responsible for the inhibition of the oncogenic activity of c-Src in glioma cells. Here we
use TAT as the cell-penetrating sequence, biotin as the pull-down tag and the region of Cx43 comprised between amino acids 266-283 as the
target to find intracellular interactions in the hard-to-transfect human glioma stem cells. One of the limitations of the proposed method is that
the molecule used as bait could fail to fold properly and, consequently, the interactions found could not be associated with the effect. However,
this method can be especially interesting for the interactions involved in signal transduction pathways because they are usually carried out
by intrinsically disordered regions and, therefore, they do not require an ordered folding. In addition, one of the advantages of the proposed
method is that the relevance of each residue on the interaction can be easily studied. This is a modular system; therefore, other cell-penetrating
sequences, other tags, and other intracellular targets can be employed. Finally, the scope of this protocol is far beyond protein-protein interaction
because this system can be applied to other bioactive cargoes such as RNA sequences, nanoparticles, viruses or any molecule that can be
transduced with cell-penetrating sequences and fused to pull-down tags to study their intracellular mechanism of action
Lived experiences and opinions of women of sub-Saharan origin on female genital mutilation: A phenomenological study
Aims and objectives: This study aimed to describe and understand the lived experi-ences and opinions of sub-Saharan women living in Spain in relation to female genital mutilation.Background: Female genital mutilation is a bloody procedure with serious conse-quences for the health of women and girls. Understanding mutilated women's lived experiences plays a crucial role in the management of health consequences and could help healthcare professionals to provide assistance to these women.Design: A descriptive phenomenological study was carried out. The COREQ checklist was followed as guidance to write the manuscript.Methods: A total of 12 in-depth interviews were conducted. Interviews were re-corded, transcribed and analysed using ATLAS.ti 9.0.Results: Two themes with four subthemes were identified from the data analysis: 1) âThe traumatic experience of female circumcisionâ with the subthemes âFemale muti-lation is a physical and psychological torture procedureâ and ârecognising and coping with negative emotionsâ; 2) âThe fight for the eradication of female genital mutilationâ which contains the subthemes âthe need for a real sociocultural change at the originâ and ââI want to be the lastâ: Personal development leads to sociocultural changeâ.Conclusions: Female genital mutilation was experienced by women as a very aggres-sive and traumatic event. It causes considerable negative emotions that last over time. Although there is a tendency to reject the practice, in women's countries of origin, there is social pressure for girls to be mutilated.Relevance to clinical practice: Caring for women who have suffered from female genital mutilation requires awareness of the traumatic experience they underwent when they were girls. Healthcare professionals play a crucial role in eradicating female genital mutilation. Apart from education, preventive measures may include specific recommendations when girls are travelling to the country of origin and participatory action research
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