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Ligands of the endothelial-enriched tunica interna endothelial cell kinase 2 (Tie2) are markedly imbalanced in severe infections associated with vascular leakage, yet regulation of the receptor itself has been understudied in this context. Here, we show that TIE2 gene expression may constitute a novel vascular barrier control mechanism in diverse infections. Tie2 expression declined rapidly in wide-ranging models of leak-associated infections, including anthrax, influenza, malaria, and sepsis. Forced Tie2 suppression sufficed to attenuate barrier function and sensitize endothelium to permeability mediators. Rapid reduction of pulmonary Tie2 in otherwise healthy animals attenuated downstream kinase signaling to the barrier effector vascular endothelial (VE)-cadherin and induced vascular leakage. Compared with wild-type littermates, mice possessing one allele of Tie2 suffered more severe vascular leakage and higher mortality in two different sepsis models. Common genetic variants that influence TIE2 expression were then sought in the HapMap3 cohort. Remarkably, each of the three strongest predicted cis-acting SNPs in HapMap3 was also associated with the risk of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) in an intensive care unit cohort of 1,614 subjects. The haplotype associated with the highest TIE2 expression conferred a 28% reduction in the risk of ARDS independent of other major clinical variables, including disease severity. In contrast, the most common haplotype was associated with both the lowest TIE2 expression and 31% higher ARDS risk. Together, the results implicate common genetic variation at the TIE2 locus as a determinant of vascular leak-related clinical outcomes from common infections, suggesting new tools to identify individuals at unusual risk for deleterious complications of infection.Among vascular-enriched receptor tyrosine kinases, Tie2 is unusual in at least two functional aspects. First, Tie2 phosphorylation is tightly controlled by the interplay of several proteins: a paralogous receptor, Tie1; a tyrosine phosphatase, vascular endothelial-protein tyrosine phosphatase (VE-PTP); and two secreted ligands, angiopoietin (Angpt)-1 and Angpt-2, the latter of which can act as an agonist, partial agonist, or antagonist depending upon context (16). Second, unlike classic growth factor receptors, Tie2 is heavily expressed and phosphorylated throughout the quiescent adult vasculature (7), suggesting that Tie2 signaling has one or more roles in vascular maintenance.Based largely on Angpt-1 overexpression studies, Tie2 has been implicated in vascular barrier defense (8, 9). However, adult-specific deletion of Angpt-1 does not appear to trigger vascular leakage (10). Moreover, Angpt-1 has repeatedly been ascribed functions that are independent of Tie2 (1113). Finally, observational studies in humans suffering clinical manifestations of vascular leakage have consistently shown a marked imbalance in Tie2 ligands tilting in favor of Angpt-2 (reviewed in 14). Although decreased Tie2 activity has been inferred from these reports, the role of TIE2 gene expression has not been directly queried experimentally or in clinical settings.This question is important not only for understanding control mechanisms of the circulatory system but also to guide the development of strategies to predict, stratify, and treat patients affected by acute vascular leakage. If tonic Tie2 signaling is indeed necessary for vascular barrier maintenance, then reducing the pool of receptors could constitute a ligand-independent means to attenuate barrier-protective signaling in the endothelium. We therefore hypothesized that the level of Tie2 expression modulates the sensitivity of blood vessels, and thereby the entire organism, to noxious stimuli. Cellular, rodent, and human genetics studies were undertaken to test this concept.  相似文献   
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In an attempt to further reduce operating costs, in 2004 our institution embarked on a novel approach in which we defined the price to be paid for interventional cardiology supplies and challenged vendors to meet that price. The results suggest that this strategy can further reduce supply costs while maintaining collaborative relationships with vendors.  相似文献   
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The growing usage of nanoscale zerovalent iron particles (nZVI) in the remediation of soil, ground/surface water has elicited large‐scale environmental release triggering human exposure. The size of nanomaterials is a key regulator of toxicity. However, the effect of a variable size of nZVI on genotoxicity is unexplored in human cells. To the best of our knowledge, in this study, the cytotoxic, genotoxic and hemolytic potential of nZVI‐1 (15 nm) and nZVI‐2 (50 nm) at concentrations of 5, 10 and 20 μg/mL was evaluated for the first time in human lymphocytes and erythrocytes treated for 3 hours. In erythrocytes, spherocytosis and echinocytosis occurred upon exposure to nZVI‐1 and nZVI‐2, respectively, leading to hemolysis. Lymphocytes treated with 20 μg/mL nZVI‐2 and 10 μg/mL nZVI‐1, incurred maximum DNA damage, although nZVI‐2 induced higher cyto‐genotoxicity than nZVI‐1. This can be attributed to higher Fe ion dissolution and time/concentration‐dependent colloidal destabilization (lower zeta potential) of nZVI‐2. Although nZVI‐1 showed higher uptake, its lower genotoxicity can be due to lesser Fe content, Fe ion dissolution and superior colloidal stability (higher zeta potential) compared with nZVI‐2. Substantial accumulation of Ca2+, superoxide anions, hydroxyl radicals and H2O2 leading to mitochondrial impairment and altered antioxidant enzyme activity was noted at the same concentrations. Pre‐treatment with N‐acetyl‐cysteine modulated these parameters indicating the indirect action of reactive oxygen species in nZVI‐induced DNA damage. The morphology of diffused nuclei implied the possible onset of apoptotic cell death. These results validate the synergistic role of size, ion dissolution, colloidal stability and reactive oxygen species on cyto‐genotoxicity of nZVI and unlock further prospects in its environmental nano‐safety evaluation.  相似文献   
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In K+ channels, the selectivity filter, pore helix, and outer vestibule play a crucial role in gating mechanisms. The outer vestibule is an important structurally extended region of KcsA in which toxins, blockers, and metal ions bind and modulate the gating behavior of K+ channels. Despite its functional significance, the gating-related structural dynamics at the outer vestibule are not well understood. Under steady-state conditions, inactivating WT and noninactivating E71A KcsA stabilize the nonconductive and conductive filter conformations upon opening the activation gate. Site-directed fluorescence polarization of 7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazol-4-yl (NBD)-labeled outer vestibule residues shows that the outer vestibule of open/conductive conformation is highly dynamic compared with the motional restriction experienced by the outer vestibule during inactivation gating. A wavelength-selective fluorescence approach shows a change in hydration dynamics in inactivated and noninactivated conformations, and supports a possible role of restricted/bound water molecules in C-type inactivation gating. Using a unique restrained ensemble simulation method, along with distance measurements by EPR, we show that, on average, the outer vestibule undergoes a modest backbone conformational change during its transition to various functional states, although the structural dynamics of the outer vestibule are significantly altered during activation and inactivation gating. Taken together, our results support the role of a hydrogen bond network behind the selectivity filter, side-chain conformational dynamics, and water molecules in the gating mechanisms of K+ channels.The functional behavior of K+ channels is defined by a series of structural rearrangements associated with the processes of activation and inactivation gating (16). In response to a prolonged stimulus and in the absence of an N-terminal inactivating particle, most K+ channels become nonconductive through a process known as C-type inactivation (7). This C-type inactivation is crucial in controlling the firing patterns in excitable cells and is fundamental in determining the length and frequency of the cardiac action potential (8). C-type inactivation is inhibited by high extracellular K+ (9, 10), and the blocker tetraethylammonium (TEA) (11) can also be slowed down in the presence of permeant ions with a long residence time in the selectivity filter (Rb+, Cs+, and NH4+) (10).The prokaryotic pH-gated K+ channel KcsA shares most of the mechanistic properties of C-type inactivation in voltage-dependent K+ channels (5, 6, 1216). Recent crystal structures of open/inactivated KcsA reveal that there is a remarkable correlation between the degree of opening at the activation gate and the conformation and ion occupancy of the selectivity filter (5). In KcsA, the selectivity filter is stabilized by a hydrogen bond network, with key interactions between residues Glu71, Asp80, and Trp67 and a bound water molecule (17). Disrupting this hydrogen bond network favors the conductive conformation of the selectivity filter (12, 13, 15).Early electrophysiological experiments have suggested that the outer vestibule (around T449 residue in Shaker and Y82 residue in KcsA) undergoes significant conformational rearrangement during C-type inactivation gating (16, 18, 19). However, comparison of the WT KcsA crystal structure, where the filter is in its conductive conformation, with either the structure obtained with low K+ (collapsed filter) (17) or the crystal structure of open-inactivated KcsA with maximum opening (inactivated filter) (5) does not show major conformational changes in the outer vestibule that would explain these results (Fig. 1A). We have suggested that this apparent discrepancy can be understood if we take into consideration the potential differences in the dynamic behavior of the outer vestibule changes as the K+ channel undergoes its gating cycle (16).Open in a separate windowFig. 1.Comparison of outer vestibule conformation in KcsA structures with conductive and collapsed/inactivated filters. (A) High-K+ KcsA structure [Protein Data Bank (PDB) ID code 1K4C; yellow] is compared with a low-K+ KcsA structure (PDB ID code 1K4D; blue) in the closed state (Left) and open/inactivated conformation (PDB ID code 3F5W; green) (Right). The outer vestibule residues are depicted as red spheres, and relevant residues are labeled. (B) Schematic representation of typical macroscopic currents elicited by pH-jump experiments in WT (inactivating) and E71A (noninactivating) KcsA channels at a depolarizing membrane potential is shown. Conditions that stabilize the closed, open/inactivated, and open/conductive conformations at the steady state are indicated with a black circle. (C) Effect of opening the lower gate on the mobility of spin-labeled outer vestibule residues in palmitoyloleoylphosphatidyl choline/palmitoyloleoylphosphatidyl glycerol (POPC/POPG) (3:1, moles/moles) reconstituted WT (Left) and noninactivating mutant E71A (Right) backgrounds for the closed (pH 7, red) and open (pH 4, black) states of KcsA, as determined by continuous wave (CW) EPR. The spectra shown are amplitude-normalized. Details are provided in SI Materials and Methods.We have probed the gating-induced structural dynamics at the outer vestibule of KcsA using site-directed fluorescence and site-directed spin labeling and pulsed EPR approaches in combination with a recently developed computational method, restrained ensemble (RE) simulations. RE simulation was used to constrain the outer vestibule using experimentally derived distance histograms in different functional states (closed, open/inactivated, and open/conductive) and to monitor the extent of backbone conformational changes during gating. To this end, we took advantage of our ability to stabilize both the open/conductive (E71A mutant) and the open/inactivated (WT) conformations of KcsA upon opening the activation gate under steady-state conditions (Fig. 1B).Our data show that the outer vestibule in the open/conductive conformation is highly dynamic. In addition, the red edge excitation shift (REES) points to a change in hydration dynamics between conductive and nonconductive outer vestibule conformations, suggesting a role of restricted water molecules in C-type inactivation gating. We suggest that, on average, the backbone conformation of the outer vestibule does not change significantly between different functional states but that local dynamics change significantly, underlining the importance of the hydrogen bond network behind the selectivity filter and the microscopic observables (e.g., dynamics of hydration) in K+ channel gating and C-type inactivation.  相似文献   
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