16,364 research outputs found
Transport proteins determine drug sensitivity and resistance in a protozoan parasite, Trypanosoma brucei
Drug resistance in pathogenic protozoa is very often caused by changes to the ‘transportome’ of the parasites. In Trypanosoma brucei, several transporters have been implicated in uptake of the main classes of drugs, diamidines and melaminophenyl arsenicals. The resistance mechanism had been thought to be due to loss of a transporter known to carry both types of agents: the aminopurine transporter P2, encoded by the gene TbAT1. However, although loss of P2 activity is well-documented as the cause of resistance to the veterinary diamidine diminazene aceturate (Berenil®), cross-resistance between the human-use arsenical melarsoprol and the diamidine pentamidine (MPXR) is the result of loss of a separate High Affinity Pentamidine Transporter (HAPT1). A genome-wide RNAi library screen for resistance to pentamidine, published in 2012, gave the key to the genetic identity of HAPT1 by linking the phenomenon to a locus that contains the closely related T. brucei aquaglyceroporin genes TbAQP2 and TbAQP3. Further analysis determined that knockdown of only one pore, TbAQP2, produced the MPXR phenotype. TbAQP2 is an unconventional aquaglyceroporin with unique residues in the “selectivity region” of the pore, and it was found that in several MPXR lab strains the WT gene was either absent or replaced by a chimeric protein, recombined with parts of TbAQP3. Importantly, wild-type AQP2 was also absent in field isolates of T. b. gambiense, correlating with the outcome of melarsoprol treatment. Expression of a wild-type copy of TbAQP2 in even the most resistant strain completely reversed MPXR and re-introduced HAPT1 function and transport kinetics. Expression of TbAQP2 in Leishmania mexicana introduced a pentamidine transport activity indistinguishable from HAPT1. Although TbAQP2 has been shown to function as a classical aquaglyceroporin it is now clear that it is also a high affinity drug transporter, HAPT1. We discuss here a possible structural rationale for this remarkable ability
Introduzione
L\u2019innovazione e l\u2019internazionalizzazione rappresentano fattori fondamentali del successo economico e competitivo delle imprese. Da un lato il processo di internazionalizzazione risulta favorito dall\u2019innovazione; dall\u2019altro il processo di innovazione appare stimolato dall\u2019entrata in nuovi mercati. Il quadro teorico \ue8 particolarmente articolato e la relazione tra i due fenomeni, sempre pi\uf9 studiata, risulta essere una questione ancora aperta nella letteratura economico-manageriale. I risultati di diversi studi evidenziano infatti l\u2019esistenza di relazioni complesse e la necessit\ue0 di ulteriori approfondimenti. Proprio per cercare di contribuire al dibattito su queste tematiche, \ue8 stato avviato un progetto di ricerca finanziato dall\u2019Universit\ue0 di Trieste (Progetto FRA 2012), di cui questo volume riporta i risultati principali
New VLT observations of the Fermi pulsar PSR J1048-5832
PSR J1048-5832 is a Vela-like (P=123.6 ms; tau~20.3 kyr) gamma-ray pulsar
detected by Fermi, at a distance of ~2.7 kpc and with a rotational energy loss
rate dot{E}_{SD} ~2 x 10^{36} erg/s. The PSR J1048-5832 field has been observed
with the VLT in the V and R bands. We used these data to determine the colour
of the object detected closest to the Chandra position (Star D) and confirm
that it is not associated with the pulsar. For the estimated extinction along
the line of sight, inferred from a re-analysis of the Chandra and XMM-Newton
spectra, the fluxes of Star D (V~26.7; R~25.8) imply a -0.13 < (V-R)_0 < 0.6.
This means that the PSR J1048-5832 spectrum would be unusually red compared to
the Vela pulsar.Moreover, the ratio between the unabsorbed optical and X-ray
flux of PSR J1048-5832 would be much higher than for other young pulsars. Thus,
we conclude that Star D is not the PSR J1048-5832 counterpart. We compared the
derived R and V-band upper limits (R>26.4; V>27.6) with the extrapolation of
the X and gamma-ray spectra and constrained the pulsar spectrum at
low-energies. In particular, the VLT upper limits suggest that the pulsar
spectrum could be consistent with a single power-law, stretching from the
gamma-rays to the optical.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication on Monthly Notices of
the Royal Astronomical Society Main Journa
HST and VLT observations of the neutron star 1E 1207.4-5209
1E 1207.4-5209, the peculiar Central Compact object in the G296.5+10.0
supernova remnant, has been proposed to be an "anti-magnetar" - a young neutron
star born with a weak dipole field. Accretion, possibly of supernova fallback
material, has also been invoked to explain a large surface temperature
anisotropy as well as the generation of peculiar cyclotron absorption features
superimposed to its thermal spectrum. Interestingly enough, a faint
optical/infrared source was proposed as a possible counterpart to 1E
1207.4-5209, but later questioned, based on coarse positional coincidence.
Considering the large offset of 1E 1207.4-5209 with respect to the center of
its host supernova remnant, the source should move at ~70 mas/yr. Thus, we
tested the association by measuring the proper motion of the proposed optical
counterpart. Using HST observations spanning 3.75 years, we computed a 3 sigma
upper limit of 7 mas/yr. Absolute astrometry on the same HST data set also
places the optical source significantly off the 99% confidence Chandra
position. This allows us to safely rule out the association. Using the HST data
set, coupled to ground-based observations collected at the ESO/VLT, we set the
deepest limits ever obtained to the optical/infrared emission from 1E
1207.4-5209. By combining such limits to the constraints derived from X-ray
timing, we rule out accretion as the source of the thermal anisotropy of the
neutron star.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
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