7,074 research outputs found

    Positive Feedback Keeps Duration of Mitosis Temporally Insulated from Upstream Cell-Cycle Events

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    Cell division is characterized by a sequence of events by which a cell gives rise to two daughter cells. Quantitative measurements of cell-cycle dynamics in single cells showed that despite variability in G1-, S-, and G2 phases, duration of mitosis is short and remarkably constant. Surprisingly, there is no correlation between cell-cycle length and mitotic duration, suggesting that mitosis is temporally insulated from variability in earlier cell-cycle phases. By combining live cell imaging and computational modeling, we showed that positive feedback is the molecular mechanism underlying the temporal insulation of mitosis. Perturbing positive feedback gave rise to a sluggish, variable entry and progression through mitosis and uncoupled duration of mitosis from variability in cell cycle length. We show that positive feedback is important to keep mitosis short, constant, and temporally insulated and anticipate it might be a commonly used regulatory strategy to create modularity in other biological systems

    Amiloidose. Caracterização Epidemiológica, Clínica e Morfológica

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    Introdução: A amiloidose é uma doença sistémica, cujo diagnóstico cabe frequentemente ao nefrologista. O tipo de amiloidose varia de acordo com o grau de desenvolvimento do país, com maior prevalência de amiloidose AL nos países ricos. Material e métodos: Revisão retrospectiva de todas as biopsias de rim nativo avaliadas no serviço entre 1981 e 2008. Caracterização clínica dos doentes à data da biópsia. Avaliação morfológica qualitativa do tipo de substância amiloíde por imunofluorescência e imunoperoxidase. Avaliação semi-quantitativa do grau de depósitos de acordo com a sua localização; grau de glomeruloesclerose e fibrose tubulo -interstical. Resultados: Neste período de 28 anos, observámos 202 biópsias positivas para substância amiloíde (3,5% de 5797) num total de 197 doentes (54,4% homens vs 45,5 mulheres), com idade mediana de 59,5 ± 15,6 anos. A maioria (68%) dos doentes foi biopsada por síndrome nefrótico. A insuficiência renal e as alterações assintomáticas urinárias foram os outros principais motivos de biopsia em 15 % e 7% dos casos, respectivamente. Os doentes na altura da biopsia apresentavam proteinúria mediana de 5 g/dia ± 5,4 (n=144) e creatinina mediana de 1,3 ± 1,7 mg/dl (n=150). As amiloidoses foram classificadas como AA em 51% dos casos, AL em 31,6% (25,5% lambda e 5,9% kappa) e Polineuropatia Amiloidótica Familiar em 3,5%. Não foi possível a caracterização do tipo de amilóide, por dificuldade técnica, em 12,8% das biópsias. A amiloidose revelou-se a terceira causa de síndrome nefrótico nos doentes com mais de 65 anos. Os doentes com amiloidose primária são significativamente mais velhos do que aqueles com amiloidose secundária ou PAF (65,2 vs 53,7 vs 52,7 respectivamente, p <0,05).Verificámos uma diminuição da incidência das amiloidoses AA com aumento das AL, com inversão do predomínio das AA em relação as AL a partir de 1995. Em termos morfológicos, a maioria das biópsias caracteriza-se por deposição marcada de amilóide no glomérulo (30% com +++) e nos vasos (40% com +++), com escassa deposição a nível intersticial cortical (60% sem depósitos) e medular (50% sem depósitos). Estudámos as possíveis relações entre manifestações clínicas e morfologia renal. Verificámos uma correlação positiva entre creatinina e grau de fibrose e/ou grau de deposição intersticial. Não encontrámos relação entre proteinúria e grau/local de deposição de amilóide. Conclusões: Actualmente, em Portugal, predomina a amiloidose AL, que surge em doentes mais idosos e se manifesta mais frequentemente por sindrome nefrótico. A função renal a data da biópsia correlaciona-se com o grau de fibrose tubulo-interstical renal

    Anti-MuSK-positive myasthenia gravis diagnosed during pregnancy: New challenges for an old disease

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    Myasthenia gravis is an autoimmune disorder affecting predominantly women in their reproductive age. The course of the disease during pregnancy is unpredictable, although it is more difficult to manage earlier in the gestation. Myasthenia gravis with antibodies against the muscle-specific receptor tyrosine kinase (anti-MuSK) has been described as a subtype of disease with more localised clinical features and a poorer response to treatment than acetylcholine receptor antibody (anti-AChR)-positive patients. Few cases have been reported in pregnant women, with deliveries being performed mainly by caesarean section. We report a successful case of vaginal delivery and describe our experience providing the first review of the management of this subtype of disease during pregnancy

    Peritubular Capillaries C4d Deposits in Renal Allograft Biopsies and Anti HLA I/II Alloantibodies Screening. Incidence and Clinical Importance

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    Aim: To characterise clinically the patients with C4d in peritubular capillaries deposits (C4dPTCD) and/or circulating anti-HLA class I/II alloantibodies. To determine the correlation between positive C4dPTCD and circulating anti-HLA class I/II alloantibodies during episodes of graft dysfunction. Subjects and Methods: C4d staining was performed in biopsies with available frozen tissue obtained between January 2004 and December 2006. The study was prospective from March 2005, when a serum sample was obtained at the time of biopsy to detect circulating anti-HLA class I/II alloantibodies. Results: We studied 109 biopsies in 86 cadaver renal transplant patients. Sixteen of these (14.7%) presented diffuse positive C4dPTCD. There was a 13.5% rate of +C4dPTCD incidence within the first six months of transplantation and 16% after six months (p>0.05). Half of the +C4dPTCD in the first six months was associated with acute humoral rejection. After six months, the majority of +C4dPTCD (n=7/8) was present in biopsies with evidence of interstitial fibrosis/tubular atrophy and/or transplant glomerulopathy. The C4dPTCD was more frequent in patients with positive anti-HCV antibodies(p<0.0001), a previous renal transplant (p=0.007), and with a panel reactivity antibody (PRA) ≥ 50%(p=0.0098). The anti-HCV+ patients had longer time on dialysis (p=0.0019) and higher PRA(p=0.005). Circulating anti-HLA I/II alloantibodies were screened in 46 serum samples. They were positive in 10.9% of samples, all obtained after six months post transplant. Circulating alloantibodies were absent in 92.5% of the C4d negative biopsies. Conclusion: We found an association between the presence of C4dPTCD and 2nd transplant recipients,higher PRA and the presence of anti-HCV antibodies. The presence of HCV antibodies is not a risk factor for C4dPTCD per se, but appears to reflect longer time on dialysis and presensitisation. In renal dysfunction a negative alloantibody screening is associated with a reduced risk of C4dPTCD (<10%)

    Doença Ateroembólica Como Causa de Disfunção Primária do Enxerto Renal

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    Atheroembolic renal disease, also referred to as cholesterol crystal embolization, is a rare cause of renal failure, secondary to occlusion of renal arteries, renal arterioles and glomerular capillaries with cholesterol crystals, originating from atheromatous plaques of the aorta and other major arteries. This disease can occur very rarely in kidney allografts in an early or a late clinical form. Renal biopsy seems to be a reliable diagnostic test and cholesterol clefts are the pathognomonic finding. However, the renal biopsy has some limitations as the typical lesion is focal and can be easily missed in a biopsy fragment. The clinical course of these patients varies from complete recovery of the renal function to permanent graft loss. Statins, acetylsalicyclic acid, and corticosteroids have been used to improve the prognosis. We report a case of primary allograft dysfunction caused by an early and massive atheroembolic renal disease. Distinctive histology is presented in several consecutive biopsies. We evaluated all the cases of our Unit and briefly reviewed the literature. Atheroembolic renal disease is a rare cause of allograft primary non -function but may become more prevalent as acceptance of aged donors and recipients for transplantation has become more frequent

    Overview on sugar metabolism and its control in Lactococcus lactis - The input from in vivo NMR

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    The wide application of lactic acid bacteria in the production of fermented foods depends to a great extent on the unique features of sugar metabolism in these organisms. The relative metabolic simplicity and the availability of genetic tools made Lactococcus lactis the organism of choice to gain insight into metabolic and regulatory networks. In vivo nuclear magnetic resonance has proven a very useful technique to monitor non-invasively the dynamics of intracellular metabolite and co-factor pools following a glucose pulse. Examples of the application of this methodology to identify metabolic bottlenecks and regulatory sites are presented. The use of this information to direct metabolic engineering strategies is illustrated. (c) 2005 Federation of European Microbiological Societies. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved

    Atypical Phenotype in Two Patients with LAMA2 Mutations

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    Congenital muscular dystrophy type 1A is caused by mutations in the LAMA2 gene, which encodes the a2-chain of laminin. We report two patients with partial laminin-a2 deficiency and atypical phenotypes, one with almost exclusive central nervous system involvement (cognitive impairment and refractory epilepsy) and the second with marked cardiac dysfunction, rigid spine syndrome and limb-girdle weakness. Patients underwent clinical, histopathological, imaging and genetic studies. Both cases have two heterozygous LAMA2 variants sharing a potentially pathogenic missense mutation c.2461A>C (p.Thr821Pro) located in exon 18. Brain MRI was instrumental for the diagnosis, since muscular examination and motor achievements were normal in the first patient and there was a severe cardiac involvement in the second. The clinical phenotype of the patients is markedly different which could in part be explained by the different combination of mutations types (two missense versus a missense and a truncating mutation)

    Composite structural motifs of binding sites for delineating biological functions of proteins

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    Most biological processes are described as a series of interactions between proteins and other molecules, and interactions are in turn described in terms of atomic structures. To annotate protein functions as sets of interaction states at atomic resolution, and thereby to better understand the relation between protein interactions and biological functions, we conducted exhaustive all-against-all atomic structure comparisons of all known binding sites for ligands including small molecules, proteins and nucleic acids, and identified recurring elementary motifs. By integrating the elementary motifs associated with each subunit, we defined composite motifs which represent context-dependent combinations of elementary motifs. It is demonstrated that function similarity can be better inferred from composite motif similarity compared to the similarity of protein sequences or of individual binding sites. By integrating the composite motifs associated with each protein function, we define meta-composite motifs each of which is regarded as a time-independent diagrammatic representation of a biological process. It is shown that meta-composite motifs provide richer annotations of biological processes than sequence clusters. The present results serve as a basis for bridging atomic structures to higher-order biological phenomena by classification and integration of binding site structures.Comment: 34 pages, 7 figure
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