705 research outputs found
Influence of polymorphisms in TNF-α and IL1β on susceptibility to alcohol induced liver diseases and therapeutic potential of miR-124-3p impeding TNF-α/IL1β mediated multi-cellular signaling in liver microenvironment
Background and aimsAlcoholic liver disease (ALD) is the leading cause of the liver cirrhosis related death worldwide. Excessive alcohol consumption resulting enhanced gut permeability which trigger sensitization of inflammatory cells to bacterial endotoxins and induces secretion of cytokines, chemokines leading to activation of stellate cells, neutrophil infiltration and hepatocyte injury followed by steatohepatitis, fibrosis and cirrhosis. But all chronic alcoholics are not susceptible to ALD. This study investigated the causes of differential immune responses among ALD patients and alcoholic controls (ALC) to identify genetic risk factors and assessed the therapeutic potential of a microRNA, miR-124-3p.Materials and methodsBio-Plex Pro™ Human Chemokine analysis/qRT-PCR array was used for identification of deregulated immune genes. Sequencing/luciferase assay/ELISA detected and confirmed the polymorphisms. THP1 co-cultured with HepG2/LX2/HUVEC and apoptosis assay/qRT-PCR/neutrophil migration assay were employed as required.ResultsThe combined data analysis of the GSE143318/Bio-Plex Pro™ Human Chemokine array and qRT-PCR array revealed that six genes (TNFα/IL1β/IL8/MCP1/IL6/TGFβ) were commonly overexpressed in both serum/liver tissue of ALD-patients compared to ALC. The promoter sequence analysis of these 6 genes among ALD (n=322)/ALC (n=168) samples revealed that only two SNPs, rs361525(G/A) at -238 in TNF-α/rs1143627(C/T) at -31 in IL1β were independently associated with ALD respectively. To evaluate the functional implication of these SNPs on ALD development, the serum level of TNF-α/IL1β was verified and observed significantly higher in ALD patients with risk genotypes TNF-α-238GA/IL1β-31CT+TT than TNF-α-238GG/IL1β-31CC. The TNF-α/IL1β promoter Luciferase-reporter assays showed significantly elevated level of luciferase activities with risk genotypes -238AA/-31TT than -238GG/-31CC respectively. Furthermore, treatment of conditioned medium of TNF-α/IL1β over-expressed THP1 cells to HepG2/LX2/HUVEC cells independently showed enhanced level of ER stress and apoptosis in HepG2/increased TGFβ and collagen-I production by LX2/huge neutrophil infiltration through endothelial layer. However, restoration of miR-124-3p in THP1 attenuated such inter-cellular communications and hepatocyte damage/collagen production/neutrophil infiltration were prohibited. Target analysis/luciferase-reporter assays revealed that both TNF-α/IL1β were inhibited by miR-124-3p along with multiple genes from TLR4 signaling/apoptosis/fibrogenesis pathways including MYD88, TRAF3/TRADD, Caspase8/PDGFRA, TGFβR2/MCP1, and ICAM1 respectively.ConclusionThus, rs361525(G/A) in TNF-α and rs1143627(C/T) in IL1β gene may be used as early predictors of ALD susceptibility among East Indian population. Impeding overexpressed TNF-α/IL1β and various genes from associated immune response pathways, miR-124-3p exhibits robust therapeutic potential for ALD patients
Efficient Dielectrophoretic Patterning of Embryonic Stem Cells in Energy Landscapes Defined by Hydrogel Geometries
In this study, we have developed an integrated microfluidic platform for actively patterning mammalian cells, where poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) hydrogels play two important roles as a non-fouling layer and a dielectric structure. The developed system has an embedded array of PEG microwells fabricated on a planar indium tin oxide (ITO) electrode. Due to its dielectric properties, the PEG microwells define electrical energy landscapes, effectively forming positive dielectrophoresis (DEP) traps in a low-conductivity environment. Distribution of DEP forces on a model cell was first estimated by computationally solving quasi-electrostatic Maxwell’s equations, followed by an experimental demonstration of cell and particle patterning without an external flow. Furthermore, efficient patterning of mouse embryonic stem (mES) cells was successfully achieved in combination with an external flow. With a seeding density of 107 cells/mL and a flow rate of 3 μL/min, trapping of cells in the microwells was completed in tens of seconds after initiation of the DEP operation. Captured cells subsequently formed viable and homogeneous monolayer patterns. This simple approach could provide an efficient strategy for fabricating various cell microarrays for applications such as cell-based biosensors, drug discovery, and cell microenvironment studies
Thermal and pH Responsive Polymer-Tethered Multifunctional Magnetic Nanoparticles for Targeted Delivery of Anticancer Drug
Targeted and efficient delivery of
therapeutics to tumor cells is one of the key issues in cancer therapy.
In the present work, we report a temperature and pH dual responsive
core–shell nanoparticles comprising smart polymer shell coated
on magnetic nanoparticles as an anticancer drug carrier and cancer
cell-specific targeting agent. Magnetite nanoparticles (MNPs), prepared
by a simple coprecipitation method, was surface modified by introducing
amine groups using 3-aminopropyltriethoxysilane. Dual-responsive poly(<i>N</i>-isopropylacrylamide)-<i>block</i>-poly(acrylic
acid) copolymer, synthesized by reversible addition-fragmentation
chain transfer (RAFT) polymerization, was then attached to the amine-functionalized
MNPs via EDC/NHS method. Further, to accomplish cancer-specific targeting
properties, folic acid was tethered to the surface of the nanoparticles.
Thereafter, rhodamine B isothiocyanate was conjugated to endow fluorescent
property to the MNPs required for cellular imaging applications. The
nanoparticles were characterized by X-ray diffraction (XRD), transmission
electron microscopy (TEM), selected area electron diffraction (SAED),
field emission scanning electron microscopy (FESEM), energy-dispersive
X-ray spectroscopy (EDX), thermogravimetric analysis (TGA), zeta potential,
vibrating sample magnetometer (VSM), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy
(XPS) measurements, and FTIR, UV–vis spectral analysis. Doxorubicin
(DOX), an anticancer drug used for the present study, was loaded into
the nanoparticles and its release behavior was subsequently studied.
Result showed a sustained release of DOX preferentially at the desired
lysosomal pH and temperature condition. The biological activity of
the DOX-loaded MNPs was studied by MTT assay, fluorescence microscopy,
and apoptosis. Intracellular-uptake studies revealed preferential
uptake of these nanoparticles into cancer cells (HeLa cells) compared
to normal fibroblast cells (L929 cells). The <i>in vitro</i> apoptosis study revealed that the DOX-loaded nanoparticles caused
significant death to the HeLa cells. These nanoparticles were capable
of target specific release of the loaded drug in response to pH and
temperature and hence may serve as a potential drug carrier for <i>in vivo</i> applications
Table_1_Influence of polymorphisms in TNF-α and IL1β on susceptibility to alcohol induced liver diseases and therapeutic potential of miR-124-3p impeding TNF-α/IL1β mediated multi-cellular signaling in liver microenvironment.docx
Background and aimsAlcoholic liver disease (ALD) is the leading cause of the liver cirrhosis related death worldwide. Excessive alcohol consumption resulting enhanced gut permeability which trigger sensitization of inflammatory cells to bacterial endotoxins and induces secretion of cytokines, chemokines leading to activation of stellate cells, neutrophil infiltration and hepatocyte injury followed by steatohepatitis, fibrosis and cirrhosis. But all chronic alcoholics are not susceptible to ALD. This study investigated the causes of differential immune responses among ALD patients and alcoholic controls (ALC) to identify genetic risk factors and assessed the therapeutic potential of a microRNA, miR-124-3p.Materials and methodsBio-Plex Pro™ Human Chemokine analysis/qRT-PCR array was used for identification of deregulated immune genes. Sequencing/luciferase assay/ELISA detected and confirmed the polymorphisms. THP1 co-cultured with HepG2/LX2/HUVEC and apoptosis assay/qRT-PCR/neutrophil migration assay were employed as required.ResultsThe combined data analysis of the GSE143318/Bio-Plex Pro™ Human Chemokine array and qRT-PCR array revealed that six genes (TNFα/IL1β/IL8/MCP1/IL6/TGFβ) were commonly overexpressed in both serum/liver tissue of ALD-patients compared to ALC. The promoter sequence analysis of these 6 genes among ALD (n=322)/ALC (n=168) samples revealed that only two SNPs, rs361525(G/A) at -238 in TNF-α/rs1143627(C/T) at -31 in IL1β were independently associated with ALD respectively. To evaluate the functional implication of these SNPs on ALD development, the serum level of TNF-α/IL1β was verified and observed significantly higher in ALD patients with risk genotypes TNF-α-238GA/IL1β-31CT+TT than TNF-α-238GG/IL1β-31CC. The TNF-α/IL1β promoter Luciferase-reporter assays showed significantly elevated level of luciferase activities with risk genotypes -238AA/-31TT than -238GG/-31CC respectively. Furthermore, treatment of conditioned medium of TNF-α/IL1β over-expressed THP1 cells to HepG2/LX2/HUVEC cells independently showed enhanced level of ER stress and apoptosis in HepG2/increased TGFβ and collagen-I production by LX2/huge neutrophil infiltration through endothelial layer. However, restoration of miR-124-3p in THP1 attenuated such inter-cellular communications and hepatocyte damage/collagen production/neutrophil infiltration were prohibited. Target analysis/luciferase-reporter assays revealed that both TNF-α/IL1β were inhibited by miR-124-3p along with multiple genes from TLR4 signaling/apoptosis/fibrogenesis pathways including MYD88, TRAF3/TRADD, Caspase8/PDGFRA, TGFβR2/MCP1, and ICAM1 respectively.ConclusionThus, rs361525(G/A) in TNF-α and rs1143627(C/T) in IL1β gene may be used as early predictors of ALD susceptibility among East Indian population. Impeding overexpressed TNF-α/IL1β and various genes from associated immune response pathways, miR-124-3p exhibits robust therapeutic potential for ALD patients.</p
Image_1_Influence of polymorphisms in TNF-α and IL1β on susceptibility to alcohol induced liver diseases and therapeutic potential of miR-124-3p impeding TNF-α/IL1β mediated multi-cellular signaling in liver microenvironment.tif
Background and aimsAlcoholic liver disease (ALD) is the leading cause of the liver cirrhosis related death worldwide. Excessive alcohol consumption resulting enhanced gut permeability which trigger sensitization of inflammatory cells to bacterial endotoxins and induces secretion of cytokines, chemokines leading to activation of stellate cells, neutrophil infiltration and hepatocyte injury followed by steatohepatitis, fibrosis and cirrhosis. But all chronic alcoholics are not susceptible to ALD. This study investigated the causes of differential immune responses among ALD patients and alcoholic controls (ALC) to identify genetic risk factors and assessed the therapeutic potential of a microRNA, miR-124-3p.Materials and methodsBio-Plex Pro™ Human Chemokine analysis/qRT-PCR array was used for identification of deregulated immune genes. Sequencing/luciferase assay/ELISA detected and confirmed the polymorphisms. THP1 co-cultured with HepG2/LX2/HUVEC and apoptosis assay/qRT-PCR/neutrophil migration assay were employed as required.ResultsThe combined data analysis of the GSE143318/Bio-Plex Pro™ Human Chemokine array and qRT-PCR array revealed that six genes (TNFα/IL1β/IL8/MCP1/IL6/TGFβ) were commonly overexpressed in both serum/liver tissue of ALD-patients compared to ALC. The promoter sequence analysis of these 6 genes among ALD (n=322)/ALC (n=168) samples revealed that only two SNPs, rs361525(G/A) at -238 in TNF-α/rs1143627(C/T) at -31 in IL1β were independently associated with ALD respectively. To evaluate the functional implication of these SNPs on ALD development, the serum level of TNF-α/IL1β was verified and observed significantly higher in ALD patients with risk genotypes TNF-α-238GA/IL1β-31CT+TT than TNF-α-238GG/IL1β-31CC. The TNF-α/IL1β promoter Luciferase-reporter assays showed significantly elevated level of luciferase activities with risk genotypes -238AA/-31TT than -238GG/-31CC respectively. Furthermore, treatment of conditioned medium of TNF-α/IL1β over-expressed THP1 cells to HepG2/LX2/HUVEC cells independently showed enhanced level of ER stress and apoptosis in HepG2/increased TGFβ and collagen-I production by LX2/huge neutrophil infiltration through endothelial layer. However, restoration of miR-124-3p in THP1 attenuated such inter-cellular communications and hepatocyte damage/collagen production/neutrophil infiltration were prohibited. Target analysis/luciferase-reporter assays revealed that both TNF-α/IL1β were inhibited by miR-124-3p along with multiple genes from TLR4 signaling/apoptosis/fibrogenesis pathways including MYD88, TRAF3/TRADD, Caspase8/PDGFRA, TGFβR2/MCP1, and ICAM1 respectively.ConclusionThus, rs361525(G/A) in TNF-α and rs1143627(C/T) in IL1β gene may be used as early predictors of ALD susceptibility among East Indian population. Impeding overexpressed TNF-α/IL1β and various genes from associated immune response pathways, miR-124-3p exhibits robust therapeutic potential for ALD patients.</p
High-resolution phenotyping identifies NK cell subsets that distinguish healthy children from adults
<div><p>Natural killer (NK) cells are critical in immune defense against infected, stressed or transformed cells. Their function is regulated by the heterogeneous expression of a wide array of surface receptors that shape its phenotypic diversity. Although NK cells develop in the bone marrow and secondary lymphoid tissues, substantive differentiation is apparent in the peripheral blood including known age-related variation. In order to gain greater insight into phenotypic and functional variation within peripheral blood NK cells across age groups, we used multi-parametric, polyfunctional flow cytometry to interrogate the NK cell variability in 20 healthy adults and 15 5–10, 11–15 and 16–20 year-old children. We found that the normative ranges in both adults and children displayed great inter-individual variation for most markers. While the expression of several receptors did not differ, among those that did, the majority of the differences existed between adults and the three pediatric groups, rather than among children of different ages. Interestingly, we also identified variation in the individual expression of some markers by sex and ethnicity. Combinatorial analysis of NK cell receptors revealed intermediate subsets between the CD56<sup>bright</sup> and CD56<sup>dim</sup> NK cells. Furthermore, on examining the NK cell diversity by age, adults were discovered to have the lowest developmental diversity. Thus, our findings identify previously unappreciated NK cell subsets potentially distinguishing children from adults and suggest functional correlates that may have relevance in age-specific host defense.</p></div
Significant inter-individual variation of NK cell markers between age groups of healthy adults and children.
<p>NK cells were defined using flow cytometry as CD3<sup>-</sup>CD45<sup>high</sup>CD56<sup>+</sup> and gated above fluorescence minus one (FMO) controls for all NK cell markers (panels shown in <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0181134#pone.0181134.t001" target="_blank">Table 1</a>). (A-E) Percentage of NK cells positively expressing markers without stimulation among four age groups. (F-J) Median fluorescent intensity (MFI) of NK cells with positive expression of markers without stimulation among 4 age groups. 5–10 y.o. (n = 15) (red); 11–15 y.o. (n = 15) (green); 16–20 y.o. (n = 15) (blue) and adults (n = 20) (black). All bars for Panels 1–4 are indicative of surface expression. Panel 5 markers except CD3, CD45, CD56 and CD107a were detected intracellularly as described in the Materials and methods section. All data shown is mean ± S.D. *p<0.05 among four age groups by Kruskal-Wallis and post-hoc comparison by Dunn test with Bonferroni adjustment.</p
Short-term NK cell stimulation leads to significant receptor modulation.
<p>NK cells were stimulated for 4 hours using PMA/ ionomycin and evaluated using flow cytometry using panels shown in <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0181134#pone.0181134.t001" target="_blank">Table 1</a>. (A-B) Percentage difference from baseline of NK cells expressing markers after stimulation among 4 age groups. (C-D) Median fluorescent intensity (MFI) difference from baseline of NK cells with positive expression of markers after stimulation among four age groups. 5–10 y.o. (n = 15) (red); 11–15 y.o. (n = 15) (green); 16–20 y.o. (n = 15) (blue) and adults (n = 20) (black). All bars for Panels 1–4 are indicative of surface expression. Panel 5 markers except CD3, CD45, CD56 and CD107a were detected intracellularly as described in the Materials and methods section. All data shown is mean ± S.D. *p<0.05 among four age groups by Kruskal-Wallis and post-hoc comparison by Dunn test with Bonferroni adjustment.</p
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