186 research outputs found

    Transcriptomic Analysis of Human Retinal Detachment Reveals Both Inflammatory Response and Photoreceptor Death

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    Background Retinal detachment often leads to a severe and permanent loss of vision and its therapeutic management remains to this day exclusively surgical. We have used surgical specimens to perform a differential analysis of the transcriptome of human retinal tissues following detachment in order to identify new potential pharmacological targets that could be used in combination with surgery to further improve final outcome. Methodology/Principal Findings Statistical analysis reveals major involvement of the immune response in the disease. Interestingly, using a novel approach relying on coordinated expression, the interindividual variation was monitored to unravel a second crucial aspect of the pathological process: the death of photoreceptor cells. Within the genes identified, the expression of the major histocompatibility complex I gene HLA-C enables diagnosis of the disease, while PKD2L1 and SLCO4A1 -which are both down-regulated- act synergistically to provide an estimate of the duration of the retinal detachment process. Our analysis thus reveals the two complementary cellular and molecular aspects linked to retinal detachment: an immune response and the degeneration of photoreceptor cells. We also reveal that the human specimens have a higher clinical value as compared to artificial models that point to IL6 and oxidative stress, not implicated in the surgical specimens studied here. Conclusions/Significance This systematic analysis confirmed the occurrence of both neurodegeneration and inflammation during retinal detachment, and further identifies precisely the modification of expression of the different genes implicated in these two phenomena. Our data henceforth give a new insight into the disease process and provide a rationale for therapeutic strategies aimed at limiting inflammation and photoreceptor damage associated with retinal detachment and, in turn, improving visual prognosis after retinal surgery

    Transcriptional analysis of the bovine herpesvirus 1 Cooper isolate

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    Blot hybridization analysis of infected bovine herpesvirus 1 (BHV-1) cellular RNA isolated at various times post infection and after treatment with specific metabolic inhibitors was used to characterize transcription of the BHV-1 Cooper isolate. Synthesis of BHV-1 RNA was detected as early as 3 h post infection and reached a maximum at six to eight hours post infection. The most transcriptionally active area of the genome was between map units 0.110 to 0.195, within the Hin dIII I fragment. From the entire genome a total of 59 transcripts ranging in size from approximately 0.6 to 10 kilobases were characterized as belonging to one of three distinct classes. Using the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide, three immediate-early transcripts were identified as originating from the internal inverted repeat region between map units 0.734 and 0.842, corresponding to the Hin dIII D fragment. Using phosphonoacetic acid to prevent virus DNA synthesis by inhibition of the BHV-1 DNA polymerase, 28 early transcripts were recognized. The remaining 28 transcripts, classified as late RNA, were detected without the use of metabolic inhibitors at 6 to 8 h post infection. Transcription of early and late RNA was not restricted to any specific area of the genome. Eighty percent of the transcripts from both the Hin dIII A fragment, between map units 0.381 to 0.537 within the unique long segment, and the Hin dIII K fragment, between map units 0.840 to 0.907 of the unique short segment, were designated as belonging to the early class.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/41672/1/705_2005_Article_BF01316744.pd

    RIBONUCLEIC ACID METABOLISM FOLLOWING FERTILIZATION IN SEA URCHIN EGGS

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    Hybrid P(L)tl promoter with dual regulation control

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    The newly constructed P(L)tl hybrid promoter is composed of the operator and promoter sequences of tac and the -35 to -135 region of the phage λ P(L) promoter, which contains the AT-rich block and the OL2 and OL3 segments. Transcriptional properties of P(L)tl were examined and compared with tac and λ P(L) as reference promoters. The hybrid P(L)tl exhibits different and improved properties over tac promoter in four ways: (i) when repressed, the repression is almost complete; (ii) after complete induction, the hybrid P(L)tl promoter shows a 1.4-2 times higher expression; (iii) the hybrid P(L)tl promoter permits flexible gene expression because it can be utilized under either or both repression controls simultaneously; (iv) the P(L)tl promoter permits enhanced expression of genes encoding products with unknown properties. When compared with the strong promoter P(L) from phage λ, results with the P(L)tl promoter in lacZ fusion constructs show higher levels of β-galactosidase activity. We also constructed a plasmid vector, pP(L)tl7G, which contains the hybrid P(L)tl promoter with a polylinker sequence at its 3' end, which facilitates efficient fusions of foreign genes in any of the reading frame

    Studies on macrophage RNA involved in antibody production.

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