15 research outputs found

    Controlling Destiny through Chemistry: Small-Molecule Regulators of Cell Fate

    Get PDF

    GWAS of clinically defined gout and subtypes identifies multiple susceptibility loci that include urate transporter genes

    Get PDF
    Contains fulltext : 182552.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)OBJECTIVE: A genome-wide association study (GWAS) of gout and its subtypes was performed to identify novel gout loci, including those that are subtype-specific. METHODS: Putative causal association signals from a GWAS of 945 clinically defined gout cases and 1213 controls from Japanese males were replicated with 1396 cases and 1268 controls using a custom chip of 1961 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). We also first conducted GWASs of gout subtypes. Replication with Caucasian and New Zealand Polynesian samples was done to further validate the loci identified in this study. RESULTS: In addition to the five loci we reported previously, further susceptibility loci were identified at a genome-wide significance level (p<5.0x10(-8)): urate transporter genes (SLC22A12 and SLC17A1) and HIST1H2BF-HIST1H4E for all gout cases, and NIPAL1 and FAM35A for the renal underexcretion gout subtype. While NIPAL1 encodes a magnesium transporter, functional analysis did not detect urate transport via NIPAL1, suggesting an indirect association with urate handling. Localisation analysis in the human kidney revealed expression of NIPAL1 and FAM35A mainly in the distal tubules, which suggests the involvement of the distal nephron in urate handling in humans. Clinically ascertained male patients with gout and controls of Caucasian and Polynesian ancestries were also genotyped, and FAM35A was associated with gout in all cases. A meta-analysis of the three populations revealed FAM35A to be associated with gout at a genome-wide level of significance (p meta =3.58x10(-8)). CONCLUSIONS: Our findings including novel gout risk loci provide further understanding of the molecular pathogenesis of gout and lead to a novel concept for the therapeutic target of gout/hyperuricaemia

    TRPM8 on mucosal sensory nerves regulates colitogenic responses by innate immune cells via CGRP

    Get PDF
    TRPM8 is the molecular sensor for cold; however, the physiological role of TRPM8+ neurons at mucosal surfaces is unclear. Here we evaluated the distribution and peptidergic properties of TRPM8+ fibers in naive and inflamed colons, as well as their role in mucosal inflammation. We found that Trpm8-/- mice were hypersusceptible to dextran sodium sulfate (DSS)-induced colitis, and that Trpm8-/- CD11c+ DCs (dendritic cells) showed hyperinflammatory responses to toll-like receptor (TLR) stimulation. This was phenocopied in calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) receptor-deficient mice, but not in substance P receptor-deficient mice, suggesting a functional link between TRPM8 and CGRP. The DSS phenotype of CGRP receptor-deficient mice could be adoptively transferred to wild-type (WT) mice, suggesting that CGRP suppresses the colitogenic activity of bone marrow-derived cells. TRPM8+ mucosal fibers expressed CGRP in human and mouse colon. Furthermore, neuronal CGRP contents were increased in colons from naive and DSS-treated Trpm8-/- mice, suggesting deficient CGRP release in the absence of TRPM8 triggering. Finally, treatment of Trpm8-/- mice with CGRP reversed their hyperinflammatory phenotype. These results suggest that TRPM8 signaling in mucosal sensory neurons is indispensable for the regulation of innate inflammatory responses via the neuropeptide CGRP

    Combined Directed Remote Metalation−Transition Metal Catalyzed Cross Coupling Strategies: The Total Synthesis of the Aglycones of the Gilvocarcins V, M, and E and Arnottin I

    No full text

    1,1‘-Binaphthyl Dimers, Oligomers, and Polymers: Molecular Recognition, Asymmetric Catalysis, and New Materials

    No full text

    Occurrence, Biogenesis, and Synthesis of Biologically Active Carbazole Alkaloids

    No full text
    corecore