40 research outputs found
Vascular Remodeling in Health and Disease
The term vascular remodeling is commonly used to define the structural changes in blood vessel geometry that occur in response to long-term physiologic alterations in blood flow or in response to vessel wall injury brought about by trauma or underlying cardiovascular diseases.1, 2, 3, 4 The process of remodeling, which begins as an adaptive response to long-term hemodynamic alterations such as elevated shear stress or increased intravascular pressure, may eventually become maladaptive, leading to impaired vascular function. The vascular endothelium, owing to its location lining the lumen of blood vessels, plays a pivotal role in regulation of all aspects of vascular function and homeostasis.5 Thus, not surprisingly, endothelial dysfunction has been recognized as the harbinger of all major cardiovascular diseases such as hypertension, atherosclerosis, and diabetes.6, 7, 8 The endothelium elaborates a variety of substances that influence vascular tone and protect the vessel wall against inflammatory cell adhesion, thrombus formation, and vascular cell proliferation.8, 9, 10 Among the primary biologic mediators emanating from the endothelium is nitric oxide (NO) and the arachidonic acid metabolite prostacyclin [prostaglandin I2 (PGI2)], which exert powerful vasodilatory, antiadhesive, and antiproliferative effects in the vessel wall
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X-ray scattering study of the effect of hydration on the cross-beta structure of amyloid fibrils
We have investigated the effect of sample hydration on the wide-angle X-ray scattering patterns of amyloid fibrils from two different sources, hen egg white lysozyme (HEWL) and an 11-residue peptide taken from the sequence of transthyretin (TTR105-115). Both samples show an inter-strand reflection at 4.7 Å and an inter-sheet reflection which occurs at 8.8 and 10 Å for TTR105-115 and HEWL fibrils, respectively. The positions, widths, and relative intensities of these reflections are conserved in patterns obtained from dried stalks and hydrated samples over a range of fibril concentrations. In 2D scattering patterns obtained from flow-aligned hydrated samples, the inter-strand and inter-sheet reflections showed, respectively, axial and equatorial alignment relative to the fibril axis, characteristic of the cross-β structure. Our results show that the cross-β structure of the fibrils is not a product of the dehydrating conditions typically employed to produce aligned samples, but is conserved in individual fibrils in hydrated samples under dilute conditions comparable to those associated with other biophysical and spectroscopic techniques. This suggests a structure consisting of a stack of two or more sheets whose interfaces are inaccessible to bulk water
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Functionalised amyloid fibrils for roles in cell adhesion
We describe experiments designed to explore the possibility of using amyloid fibrils as new nanoscale biomaterials for promoting and exploiting cell adhesion, migration and differentiation in vitro. We created peptides that add the biological cell adhesion sequence (RGD) or a control sequence (RAD) to the C-terminus of an 11-residue peptide corresponding to residues 105-115 of the amyloidogenic protein transthyretin. These peptides readily self-assemble in aqueous solution to form amyloid fibrils, and X-ray fibre diffraction shows that they possess the same strand and sheet spacing in the characteristic cross-beta structure as do fibrils formed by the parent peptide. We report that the fibrils containing the RGD sequence are bioactive and that these fibrils interact specifically with cells via the RGD group displayed on the fibril surface. As the design of such functionalized fibrils can be systematically altered, these findings suggest that it will be possible to generate nanomaterials based on amyloid fibrils that are tailored to promote interactions with a wide variety of cell types. (c) 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
Native disulphide-linked dimers facilitate amyloid fibril formation by bovine milk alpha(S2)-casein
Bovine milk α(S2)-casein, an intrinsically disordered protein, readily forms amyloid fibrils in vitro and is implicated in the formation of amyloid fibril deposits in mammary tissue. Its two cysteine residues participate in the formation of either intra- or intermolecular disulphide bonds, generating monomer and dimer species. X-ray solution scattering measurements indicated that both forms of the protein adopt large, spherical oligomers at 20 °C. Upon incubation at 37 °C, the disulphide-linked dimer showed a significantly greater propensity to form amyloid fibrils than its monomeric counterpart. Thioflavin T fluorescence, circular dichroism and infrared spectra were consistent with one or both of the dimer isomers (in a parallel or antiparallel arrangement) being predisposed toward an ordered, amyloid-like structure. Limited proteolysis experiments indicated that the region from Ala⁸¹ to Lys¹¹³ is incorporated into the fibril core, implying that this region, which is predicted by several algorithms to be amyloidogenic, initiates fibril formation of α(S2)-casein. The partial conservation of the cysteine motif and the frequent occurrence of disulphide-linked dimers in mammalian milks despite the associated risk of mammary amyloidosis, suggest that the dimeric conformation of α(S2)-casein is a functional, yet amyloidogenic, structure.David C. Thorn, Elmira Bahraminejad, Aidan B. Grosas, Tomas Koudelka, Peter Hoffmann, Jitendra P. Mata, Glyn L. Devlin, Margaret Sunde, Heath Ecroyd, Carl Holt, John A. Carve
Asymptotically minimax bias estimation of the correlation coefficient for bivariate independent component distributions
Applications of C7LYC scintillators in fast neutron spectroscopy
The capabilities of Li-enriched Cs LiYCl (CLYC) scintillation detectors for fast neutron spectroscopy are explored in benchmark experiments that exploit its excellent pulse-shape discrimination between neutrons and rays, and its unprecedented 10% energy resolution for fast neutrons in the few MeV range, obtained through the 35Cl(n,p) reaction. Energy- and angle-resolved elastic and inelastic neutron scattering cross-section measurements of 56Fe(n,n') were performed at Los Alamos National Laboratory with a pulsed white neutron source and an array of CLYC crystals. The results convincingly establish the utility of this dual n/ scintillator for fast neutron spectroscopy. Intrinsic efficiency measurements of both and the first ever CLYC crystal have been initiated, using mono-energetic fast neutron beams at UMass Lowell generated via the Li(p,n) reaction. The spectroscopic capabilities and potential of CLYC are discussed in the context of developing this emerging scintillator for targeted science applications.The work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)
NNSA Stewardship Science Academic Alliance program Grants DE-
NA0001988 and DE-NA0002932, and Office of Science Grant DE-FG02-94ER40848. Portions of this work benefited from use of the
LANSCE accelerator facility supported under DOE Contract No. DE-
AC52-06NA2539
