352 research outputs found
Computational identification of signalling pathways in Plasmodium falciparum
Malaria is one of the world’s most common and serious diseases causing death of about 3 million people
each year. Its most severe occurrence is caused by the protozoan Plasmodium falciparum. Reports have
shown that the resistance of the parasite to existing drugs is increasing. Therefore, there is a huge and
urgent need to discover and validate new drug or vaccine targets to enable the development of new
treatments for malaria. The ability to discover these drug or vaccine targets can only be enhanced from
our deep understanding of the detailed biology of the parasite, for example how cells function and how
proteins organize into modules such as metabolic, regulatory and signal transduction pathways. It has
been noted that the knowledge of signalling transduction pathways in Plasmodium is fundamental to aid
the design of new strategies against malaria. This work uses a linear-time algorithm for finding paths in a
network under modified biologically motivated constraints. We predicted several important signalling
transduction pathways in Plasmodium falciparum. We have predicted a viable signalling pathway
characterized in terms of the genes responsible that may be the PfPKB pathway recently elucidated in
Plasmodium falciparum. We obtained from the FIKK family, a signal transduction pathway that ends up on
a chloroquine resistance marker protein, which indicates that interference with FIKK proteins might
reverse Plasmodium falciparum from resistant to sensitive phenotype. We also proposed a hypothesis
that showed the FIKK proteins in this pathway as enabling the resistance parasite to have a mechanism
for releasing chloroquine (via an efflux process). Furthermore, we also predicted a signalling pathway
that may have been responsible for signalling the start of the invasion process of Red Blood Cell (RBC) by
the merozoites. It has been noted that the understanding of this pathway will give insight into the
parasite virulence and will facilitate rational vaccine design against merozoites invasion. And we have a
host of other predicted pathways, some of which have been used in this work to predict the functionality
of some proteins
Concurrent detection of autolysosome formation and lysosomal degradation by flow cytometry in a high-content screen for inducers of autophagy
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Autophagy mediates lysosomal degradation of cytosolic components. Recent work has associated autophagic dysfunction with pathologies, including cancer and cardiovascular disease. To date, the identification of clinically-applicable drugs that modulate autophagy has been hampered by the lack of standardized assays capable of precisely reporting autophagic activity.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We developed and implemented a high-content, flow-cytometry-based screening approach for rapid, precise, and quantitative measurements of pharmaceutical control over autophagy. Our assay allowed for time-resolved individual measurements of autolysosome formation and degradation, and endolysosomal activities under both basal and activated autophagy conditions. As proof of concept, we analyzed conventional autophagy regulators, including cardioprotective compounds aminoimidazole carboxamide ribonucleotide (AICAR), rapamycin, and resveratrol, and revealed striking conditional dependencies of rapamycin and autophagy inhibitor 3-methyladenine (3-MA). To identify novel autophagy modulators with translational potential, we screened the Prestwick Chemical Library of 1,120 US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved compounds for impact on autolysosome formation. In all, 38 compounds were identified as potential activators, and 36 as potential inhibitors of autophagy. Notably, amongst the autophagy enhancers were cardiac glycosides, from which we selected digoxin, strophanthidin, and digoxigenin for validation by standard biochemical and imaging techniques. We report the induction of autophagic flux by these cardiac glycosides, and the concentrations allowing for specific enhancement of autophagic activities without impact on endolysosomal activities.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Our systematic analysis of autophagic and endolysosomal activities outperformed conventional autophagy assays and highlights the complexity of drug influence on autophagy. We demonstrate conditional dependencies of established regulators. Moreover, we identified new autophagy regulators and characterized cardiac glycosides as novel potent inducers of autophagic flux.</p
Mathematical modeling reveals threshold mechanism in CD95-induced apoptosis
Mathematical modeling is required for understanding the complex behavior of large signal transduction networks. Previous attempts to model signal transduction pathways were often limited to small systems or based on qualitative data only. Here, we developed a mathematical modeling framework for understanding the complex signaling behavior of CD95(APO-1/Fas)-mediated apoptosis. Defects in the regulation of apoptosis result in serious diseases such as cancer, autoimmunity, and neurodegeneration. During the last decade many of the molecular mechanisms of apoptosis signaling have been examined and elucidated. A systemic understanding of apoptosis is, however, still missing. To address the complexity of apoptotic signaling we subdivided this system into subsystems of different information qualities. A new approach for sensitivity analysis within the mathematical model was key for the identification of critical system parameters and two essential system properties: modularity and robustness. Our model describes the regulation of apoptosis on a systems level and resolves the important question of a threshold mechanism for the regulation of apoptosis
So rare we need to hunt for them: reframing the ethical debate on incidental findings
Incidental findings are the subject of intense ethical debate in medical genomic research. Every human genome contains a number of potentially disease-causing alterations that may be detected during comprehensive genetic analyses to investigate a specific condition. Yet available evidence shows that the frequency of incidental findings in research is much lower than expected. In this Opinion, we argue that the reason for the low level of incidental findings is that the filtering techniques and methods that are applied during the routine handling of genomic data remove these alterations. As incidental findings are systematically filtered out, it is now time to evaluate whether the ethical debate is focused on the right issues. We conclude that the key question is whether to deliberately target and search for disease-causing variations outside the indication that has originally led to the genetic analysis, for instance by using positive lists and algorithms
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