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AIDS and Behavior - We conducted a prospective cohort study of 450 patients new to an HIV clinic in Houston, TX, to examine the roles of life stressors and initial care experiences in predicting...  相似文献   
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OBJECTIVE: Autoantibodies to DNA topoisomerase I (topo I) are associated with diffuse systemic sclerosis (SSc), appear to be antigen driven, and may be triggered by cryptic epitopes exposed during in vivo topo I fragmentation. These autoantibodies recognize topo I and fragments of this autoantigen generated during apoptosis and necrosis. We undertook this study to determine whether lysosomal cathepsins are involved in topo I fragmentation during necrosis. METHODS: Topo I cleavage during necrosis was assessed by immunoblotting of lysates from L929 fibroblasts exposed to tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) and the broad caspase inhibitor Z-VAD-FMK, and by immunoblotting of lysates from endothelial cells treated with HgCl2. Purified topo I and L929 nuclei were incubated with cathepsins B, D, G, H, and L, and topo I cleavage was detected by immunoblotting. The intracellular localization of cathepsin L activity and topo I in necrotic cells was examined using fluorescence microscopy. RESULTS: Treatment of L929 cells with TNFalpha and Z-VAD-FMK induced caspase-independent cell death with necrotic morphology. This cell death involved topo I cleavage into fragments of approximately 70 kd and 45 kd. This cleavage profile was reproduced in vitro by cathepsins L and H and was inhibited by the cathepsin L inhibitor Z-FY-CHO. During necrosis, cathepsin L activity diffused from lysosomes into the cytoplasm and nucleus, whereas topo I partially relocalized to the cytoplasm. Z-FY-CHO delayed necrosis and partially blocked topo I cleavage. The topo I cleavage fragments were also detected in necrotic endothelial cells and recognized by SSc sera containing anti-topo I antibodies. CONCLUSION: These results implicate cathepsins, particularly cathepsin L, in the cleavage of topo I during necrosis. This cleavage may generate potentially immunogenic fragments that could trigger anti-topo I immune responses in SSc.  相似文献   
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Preeclampsia is a major pregnancy complication with potential short- and long-term consequences for both mother and fetus. Understanding its pathogenesis and causative biomarkers is likely to yield insights for prediction and treatment. Herein, we provide evidence that transthyretin, a transporter of thyroxine and retinol, is aggregated in preeclampsia and is present at reduced levels in sera of preeclamptic women, as detected by proteomic screen. We demonstrate that transthyretin aggregates form deposits in preeclampsia placental tissue and cause apoptosis. By using in vitro approaches and a humanized mouse model, we provide evidence for a causal link between dysregulated transthyretin and preeclampsia. Native transthyretin inhibits all preeclampsia-like features in the humanized mouse model, including new-onset proteinuria, increased blood pressure, glomerular endotheliosis, and production of anti-angiogenic factors. Our findings suggest that a focus on transthyretin structure and function is a novel strategy to understand and combat preeclampsia.Preeclampsia occurs in 5% to 8% of pregnancies worldwide and is a major cause of fetal and maternal morbidity and mortality.1–3 It is a heterogeneous disease with varied presentations from mild self-limited hypertension and proteinuria to severe forms with significant end-organ dysfunction and HELLP syndrome (hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, and low platelets).3 Although the cause of preeclampsia and its appropriate treatment remain elusive, this syndrome has been proposed to reflect at least two stages of complications during pregnancy. These begin with preclinical manifestations at the maternal-fetal interface, followed by systemic clinical symptoms.1,2 Hypertension, proteinuria, and edema, with a variable degree of fetal growth restriction, are the cardinal features of preeclampsia.3 Because the placenta is the nutritional and immunological gateway to normal fetal development and pregnancy outcome, placenta-related events are believed to be central to the pathogenesis of this disease. Evidence exists for the release of disease-initiating molecules into maternal circulation that triggers the clinical symptoms.1,4 Placental and systemic anomalies reflected by circulating placental debris, inflammation, impaired remodeling of spiral arteries, placental hypoxia/ischemia, excess production of anti-angiogenic factors [soluble fms-like tyrosine kinase-1 (sFlt-1)], and soluble endoglin (sEng), and angiotensin receptor autoantibodies have all emerged as contributors to the pathophysiological characteristics of preeclampsia.2,4–14Preeclampsia has remained enigmatic because of lack of well-defined etiology and animal models. Although normal mice do not develop preeclampsia spontaneously, mouse models have been judged to be particularly useful to uterine diseases and pregnancy complications because many similarities in female reproduction and placentation have been identified between the two species.15 Moreover, their tractable genetics provide an effective way to probe mechanisms more deeply than many other species.15–17 We recently showed that sera from preeclamptic women could function as a source of novel causative factors that induced hypertension, proteinuria, and kidney pathological characteristics, as well as intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR), in IL-10−/− mice in a pregnancy-specific manner.18 IL-10 functions as a potent vascular and anti-inflammatory cytokine and has been shown to be present at significantly reduced levels in preeclampsia placental tissue.19,20 Preeclampsia serum (PES) was found to disrupt endovascular cross talk between trophoblasts and endothelial cells and to induce placental hypoxia and excess production of sFlt-1 and sEng,18 soluble factors known to precipitate maternal symptoms.21,22 These results from our serum-based humanized mouse model suggest that the pathophysiological characteristics of preeclampsia are more complex than previously thought and are likely to involve interactions and dysregulation of multiple factors. By using serum proteomic screening by surface-enhanced laser-desorption ionization-time-of-flight (SELDI-TOF), our results suggest that PES contains a reduced abundance of transthyretin, a plasma transport protein for the thyroid hormone, thyroxine, and retinol-binding protein.23 More important, transthyretin has been widely studied for its role in amyloid diseases associated with protein misfolding and aggregation, resulting in deposits of toxic, fibrillar aggregates in specific organs.24–26 Dysregulated or reduced transthyretin has also been implicated in Alzheimer disease, and overexpression of a wild-type human transthyretin transgene has been shown to ameliorate the disease in the transgenic murine model of human Alzheimer disease.27,28 Transthyretin in its native form assumes a homotetrameric quaternary configuration (approximately 14 kDa per monomer). Post-translational modifications of the monomer result in detection of several isoforms.29 Circulating transthyretin is also a validated marker of malnutrition and has a putative role in oocyte maturation and inflammation.30–32 Although the presence of transthyretin during implantation in mice and in the placenta and trophoblasts in humans has been reported,33,34 its functional role in normal pregnancy or adverse pregnancy outcomes has not been recognized. We hypothesize that transthyretin in preeclampsia is structurally and functionally dysregulated and contributes to the onset of this serious pregnancy complication. Herein, we present complementary in vitro and in vivo approaches, which show that endogenously altered transthyretin is a preeclampsia-causing agent and that native transthyretin has the ability to block the onset of preeclampsia-like features.  相似文献   
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Type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1D) is a chronic autoimmune condition in which the immune system destroys insulin-producing pancreatic β cells. In addition to well-established pathogenic effector T cells, regulatory T cells (Tregs) have also been shown to be defective in T1D. Thus, an increasing number of therapeutic approaches are being developed to target Tregs. However, the role and mechanisms of TGF-β-induced Tregs (iTregs) in T1D remain poorly understood. Here, using a streptozotocin (STZ)-induced preclinical T1D mouse model, we found that iTregs could ameliorate the development of T1D and preserve β cell function. The preventive effect was associated with the inhibition of type 1 cytotoxic T (Tc1) cell function and rebalancing the Treg/Tc1 cell ratio in recipients. Furthermore, we showed that the underlying mechanisms were due to the TGF-β-mediated combinatorial actions of mTOR and TCF1. In addition to the preventive role, the therapeutic effects of iTregs on the established STZ-T1D and nonobese diabetic (NOD) mouse models were tested, which revealed improved β cell function. Our findings therefore provide key new insights into the basic mechanisms involved in the therapeutic role of iTregs in T1D.  相似文献   
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The effect of temperature on the toxicities of four diamide insecticides (chlorantraniliprole, cyantraniliprole, flubendiamide, tetraniliprole) against three lepidopteran insects (Helicoverpa armigera, Plutella xylostella, Athetis lepigone) were determined from 15 to 35 °C by exposing third-instar larvae to dip-treated cabbage leaf. The results indicated that increase in temperature led to an increase significantly and regularly in the toxicities of the four diamide insecticides against P. xylostella and H. armigera, but not for A. lepigone. The temperature coefficients (TCs) of the four diamide insecticides increased from 15 to 35 °C. Tetraniliprole for H. armigera (+825.83), chlorantraniliprole for P. xylostella (+315.65) and cyantraniliprole for H. armigera (+225.77) exhibited high positive TCs. For A. lepigone, temperature had a positively weak or no effect on the toxicities of most of the diamide insecticides from 20 to 30 °C, but a higher effect from 30 to 35 °C. In addition, the toxicities of chlorantraniliprole, cyantraniliprole and tetraniliprole all decreased from 15 to 20 °C. This study can guide pest managers in choosing suitable ambient field temperature when spraying diamide insecticides against lepidopteran insects.  相似文献   
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