keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38698718/metabolism-of-11-%C3%AE-and-11-%C3%AE-tocomonoenols-in-hepg2-cells-favors-the-%C3%AE-congener-and-results-predominantly-in-carboxymethylbutyl-hydroxychromans
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alexander Montoya-Arroyo, Viola Brand, Alexander Kröpfl, Walter Vetter, Jan Frank
SCOPE: Tocomonoenols (T1) are little-known vitamin E derivatives naturally occurring in foods. Limited knowledge exists regarding the cellular uptake and metabolism of α-tocomonoenol (αT1) and none about that of γ-tocomonoenol (γT1). METHODS AND RESULTS: The study investigates the cytotoxicity, uptake, and metabolism of αT1 and γT1 in HepG2 cells compared to the α- and γ-tocopherols (T) and -tocotrienols (T3). None of the studied tocochromanols are cytotoxic up to 100 µmol L-1 ...
May 3, 2024: Molecular Nutrition & Food Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38698265/suppression-of-lysosome-metabolism-meditated-garp-tgf-%C3%AE-1-complexes-specifically-depletes-regulatory-t-cells-to-inhibit-breast-cancer-metastasis
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jing Ma, Yutong Chen, Tao Li, Yi Cao, Bin Hu, Yuru Liu, Youran Zhang, Xiaoyan Li, Jianing Liu, Wei Zhang, Hanjing Niu, Jinhua Gao, Zhongze Zhang, Kexin Yue, Jiajia Wang, Guochen Bao, Chaojie Wang, Peng George Wang, Taotao Zou, Songqiang Xie
Regulatory T cells (Tregs) prevent autoimmunity and contribute to cancer progression. They exert contact-dependent inhibition of immune cells through the production of active transforming growth factor-β1 (TGF-β1). However, the absence of a specific surface marker makes inhibiting the production of active TGF-β1 to specifically deplete human Tregs but not other cell types a challenge. TGF-β1 in an inactive form binds to Tregs membrane protein Glycoprotein A Repetitions Predominant (GARP) and then activates it via an unknown mechanism...
May 2, 2024: Oncogene
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38697987/a-novel-inhibitor-of-the-mitochondrial-respiratory-complex-i-with-uncoupling-properties-exerts-potent-antitumor-activity
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alaa Al Assi, Solène Posty, Frédéric Lamarche, Amel Chebel, Jérôme Guitton, Cécile Cottet-Rousselle, Renaud Prudent, Laurence Lafanechère, Stéphane Giraud, Patrick Dallemagne, Peggy Suzanne, Aurélie Verney, Laurent Genestier, Marie Castets, Eric Fontaine, Marc Billaud, Martine Cordier-Bussat
Cancer cells are highly dependent on bioenergetic processes to support their growth and survival. Disruption of metabolic pathways, particularly by targeting the mitochondrial electron transport chain complexes (ETC-I to V) has become an attractive therapeutic strategy. As a result, the search for clinically effective new respiratory chain inhibitors with minimized adverse effects is a major goal. Here, we characterize a new OXPHOS inhibitor compound called MS-L6, which behaves as an inhibitor of ETC-I, combining inhibition of NADH oxidation and uncoupling effect...
May 2, 2024: Cell Death & Disease
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38697407/modified-banxiaxiexin-decoction-benefitted-chemotherapy-in-treating-gastric-cancer-by-regulating-multiple-targets-and-pathways
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Zhipeng Zhang, Chao Wu, Ningning Liu, Ziyuan Wang, Ziyang Pan, Yulang Jiang, Jianhui Tian, Mingyu Sun
ETHNOPHARMACOLOGICAL RELEVANCE: Chemotherapy tolerance weakened efficacy of chemotherapy drugs in the treating gastric cancer (GC). Banxiaxiexin decoction (BXXXD) was widely used in digestive diseases for thousands of years in Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM). In order to better treat GC, three other herbs were added to BXXXD to create a new prescription named Modified Banxiaxiexin decoction (MBXXXD). Although MBXXXD potentially treated GC by improving chemotherapy tolerance, the possible mechanisms were still unknown...
April 30, 2024: Journal of Ethnopharmacology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38697291/a-long-acting-leap2-analog-reduces-hepatic-steatosis-and-inflammation-and-causes-marked-weight-loss-in-mice
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kripa Shankar, Nathan P Metzger, Connor Lawrence, Deepali Gupta, Sherri Osborne-Lawrence, Salil Varshney, Omprakash Singh, Corine P Richard, Alexander N Zaykov, Rebecca Rolfts, Barent N DuBois, Diego Perez-Tilve, Bharath K Mani, Suntrea T G Hammer, Jeffrey M Zigman
OBJECTIVE: The number of individuals affected by metabolic dysfunction associated fatty liver disease [1] is on the rise, yet hormonal contributors to the condition remain incompletely described and only a single FDA-approved treatment is available. Some studies suggest that the hormones ghrelin and LEAP2, which act as agonist and antagonist/inverse agonist, respectively, for the G protein coupled receptor GHSR, may influence the development of MAFLD. For instance, ghrelin increases hepatic fat whereas synthetic GHSR antagonists do the opposite...
April 30, 2024: Molecular Metabolism
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38696702/low-intensity-pulsed-ultrasound-protects-from-inflammatory-dilated-cardiomyopathy-through-inciting-extracellular-vesicles
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ping Sun, Yi Li, Yifei Li, Huan Ji, Ge Mang, Shuai Fu, Shuangquan Jiang, Stephen Choi, Xiaoqi Wang, Zhonghua Tong, Chao Wang, Fei Gao, Pingping Wan, Shuang Chen, You Li, Peng Zhao, Xiaoping Leng, Maomao Zhang, Jiawei Tian
AIMS: CD4+ T cells are activated during inflammatory dilated cardiomyopathy (iDCM) development to induce immunogenic responses that damage the myocardium. Low-intensity pulsed ultrasound (LIPUS), a novel physiotherapy for cardiovascular diseases, has recently been shown to modulate inflammatory responses. However, its efficacy in iDCM remains unknown. Here, we investigated whether LIPUS could improve the severity of iDCM by orchestrating immune responses and explored its therapeutic mechanisms...
May 2, 2024: Cardiovascular Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38696569/a-blueprint-for-tumor-infiltrating-b-cells-across-human-cancers
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jiaqiang Ma, Yingcheng Wu, Lifeng Ma, Xupeng Yang, Tiancheng Zhang, Guohe Song, Teng Li, Ke Gao, Xia Shen, Jian Lin, Yamin Chen, Xiaoshan Liu, Yuting Fu, Xixi Gu, Zechuan Chen, Shan Jiang, Dongning Rao, Jiaomeng Pan, Shu Zhang, Jian Zhou, Chen Huang, Si Shi, Jia Fan, Guoji Guo, Xiaoming Zhang, Qiang Gao
B lymphocytes are essential mediators of humoral immunity and play multiple roles in human cancer. To decode the functions of tumor-infiltrating B cells, we generated a B cell blueprint encompassing single-cell transcriptome, B cell-receptor repertoire, and chromatin accessibility data across 20 different cancer types (477 samples, 269 patients). B cells harbored extraordinary heterogeneity and comprised 15 subsets, which could be grouped into two independent developmental paths (extrafollicular versus germinal center)...
May 3, 2024: Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38696321/neuroimaging-features-of-cytokine-related-diseases
#28
REVIEW
Mariko Kurokawa, Ryo Kurokawa, Akira Baba, Taku Gomi, Shinichi Cho, Kyohei Yoshioka, Taisuke Harada, John Kim, Pinarbasi Emile, Osamu Abe, Toshio Moritani
Cytokines are small secreted proteins that have specific effects on cellular interactions and are crucial for functioning of the immune system. Cytokines are involved in almost all diseases, but as microscopic chemical compounds they cannot be visualized at imaging for obvious reasons. Several imaging manifestations have been well recognized owing to the development of cytokine therapies such as those with bevacizumab (antibody against vascular endothelial growth factor) and chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells and the establishment of new disease concepts such as interferonopathy and cytokine release syndrome...
June 2024: Radiographics: a Review Publication of the Radiological Society of North America, Inc
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38696270/monocyte-production-of-c1q-potentiates-cd8-t-cell-function-following-respiratory-viral-infection
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Taylor Eddens, Olivia B Parks, Dequan Lou, Li Fan, Jorna Sojati, Manda Jo Ramsey, Lori Schmitt, Claudia M Salgado, Miguel Reyes-Mugica, Alysa Evans, Henry M Zou, Tim D Oury, Craig Byersdorfer, Kong Chen, John V Williams
Respiratory viral infections remain a leading cause of morbidity and mortality. Using a murine model of human metapneumovirus (HMPV), we identified recruitment of a C1q-expressing inflammatory monocyte population concomitant with viral clearance by adaptive immune cells. Genetic ablation of C1q led to reduced CD8+ T cell function. Production of C1q by a myeloid lineage was necessary to enhance CD8+ T cell function. Activated and dividing CD8+ T cells expressed a C1q receptor, gC1qR. Perturbation of gC1qR signaling led to altered CD8+ T cell IFN-γ production, metabolic capacity, and cell proliferation...
May 2, 2024: American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38695564/phenotypic-and-transcriptional-changes-in-peripheral-blood-mononuclear-cells-during-alphavirus-encephalitis-in-mice
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Benjamin H Nguyen, Maggie L Bartlett, Elizabeth M Troisi, Elise Stanley, Diane E Griffin
UNLABELLED: Sindbis virus (SINV) infection of mice provides a model system for studying the pathogenesis of alphaviruses that infect the central nervous system (CNS) to cause encephalomyelitis. While studies of human viral infections typically focus on accessible cells from the blood, this compartment is rarely evaluated in mice. To bridge this gap, single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNAseq) was combined with flow cytometry to characterize the transcriptional and phenotypic changes of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from SINV-infected mice...
May 2, 2024: MBio
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38693938/the-role-of-cholesterol-and-its-oxidation-products-in-tuberculosis-pathogenesis
#31
REVIEW
Andrew T Roth, Jennifer A Philips, Pallavi Chandra
Mycobacterium tuberculosis causes tuberculosis (TB), one of the world's most deadly infections. Lipids play an important role in M. tuberculosis pathogenesis. M. tuberculosis grows intracellularly within lipid-laden macrophages and extracellularly within the cholesterol-rich caseum of necrotic granulomas and pulmonary cavities. Evolved from soil saprophytes that are able to metabolize cholesterol from organic matter in the environment, M. tuberculosis inherited an extensive and highly conserved machinery to metabolize cholesterol...
April 2024: Immunometabolism (Cobham)
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38693782/from-islet-transplantation-to-beta-cell-regeneration-an-update-on-beta-cell-based-therapeutic-approaches-in-type-1-diabetes
#32
REVIEW
Asef Azad, Hasan Ali Altunbas, Ayse Esra Manguoglu
INTRODUCTION: Type 1 diabetes (T1D) mellitus is an autoimmune disease in which immune cells, predominantly effector T cells, destroy insulin-secreting beta-cells. Beta-cell destruction led to various consequences ranging from retinopathy and nephropathy to neuropathy. Different strategies have been developed to achieve normoglycemia, including exogenous glucose compensation, whole pancreas transplantation, islet transplantation, and beta-cell replacement. AREAS COVERED: The last two decades of experience have shown that indigenous glucose compensation through beta-cell regeneration and protection is a peerless method for T1D therapy...
May 1, 2024: Expert Review of Endocrinology & Metabolism
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38693002/immunometabolism-of-cd8-t-cell-differentiation-in-cancer
#33
REVIEW
Hao Shi, Sidi Chen, Hongbo Chi
CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) are central mediators of tumor immunity and immunotherapies. Upon tumor antigen recognition, CTLs differentiate from naive/memory-like toward terminally exhausted populations with more limited function against tumors. Such differentiation is regulated by both immune signals, including T cell receptors (TCRs), co-stimulation, and cytokines, and metabolism-associated processes. These immune signals shape the metabolic landscape via signaling, transcriptional and post-transcriptional mechanisms, while metabolic processes in turn exert spatiotemporal effects to modulate the strength and duration of immune signaling...
April 30, 2024: Trends in Cancer
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38692867/from-glycolysis-to-viral-defense-the-multifaceted-impact-of-glycolytic-enzymes-on-human-immunodeficiency-virus-type-1-replication
#34
REVIEW
Naoki Kishimoto, Shogo Misumi
Viruses require host cells to replicate and proliferate, which indicates that viruses hijack the cellular machinery. Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) primarily infects CD4-positive T cells, and efficiently uses cellular proteins to replicate. Cells already have proteins that inhibit the replication of the foreign HIV-1, but their function is suppressed by viral proteins. Intriguingly, HIV-1 infection also changes the cellular metabolism to aerobic glycolysis. This phenomenon has been interpreted as a cellular response to maintain homeostasis during viral infection, yet HIV-1 efficiently replicates even in this environment...
2024: Biological & Pharmaceutical Bulletin
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38692735/context-specific-stress-causes-compartmentalized-sarm1-activation-and-local-degeneration-in-cortical-neurons
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Flora I Hinz, Carmela Louise M Villegas, Jasmine T Roberts, Heming Yao, Shreya Gaddam, Anton Delwig, Samantha A Green, Craig Fredrickson, Max Adrian, Raymond R Asuncion, Tommy K Cheung, Margaret Hayne, David H Hackos, Christopher M Rose, David Richmond, Casper C Hoogenraad
SARM1 is an inducible NADase that localizes to mitochondria throughout neurons and senses metabolic changes that occur after injury. Minimal proteomic changes are observed upon either SARM1 depletion or activation, suggesting that SARM1 does not exert broad effects on neuronal protein homeostasis. However, whether SARM1 activation occurs throughout the neuron in response to injury and cell stress remains largely unknown. Using a semi-automated imaging pipeline and a custom-built deep learning scoring algorithm, we studied degeneration in both mixed sex mouse primary cortical neurons and male human iPSC derived cortical neurons in response to a number of different stressors...
May 1, 2024: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38692280/adipose-tissue-treg%C3%A2-cells-restrain-differentiation-of-stromal-adipocyte-precursors-to-promote-insulin-sensitivity-and-metabolic-homeostasis
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gang Wang, Andrés R Muñoz-Rojas, Raul German Spallanzani, Ruth A Franklin, Christophe Benoist, Diane Mathis
Regulatory T (Treg) cells in epidydimal visceral adipose tissue (eVAT) of lean mice and humans regulate metabolic homeostasis. We found that constitutive or punctual depletion of eVAT-Treg cells reined in the differentiation of stromal adipocyte precursors. Co-culture of these precursors with conditional medium from eVAT-Treg cells limited their differentiation in vitro, suggesting a direct effect. Transcriptional comparison of adipocyte precursors, matured in the presence or absence of the eVAT-Treg-conditioned medium, identified the oncostatin-M (OSM) signaling pathway as a key distinction...
April 25, 2024: Immunity
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38691831/tongfu-lifei-decoction-attenuated-sepsis-related-intestinal-mucosal-injury-through-regulating-th17-treg-balance-and-modulating-gut-microbiota
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Huizhen Chen, Zhenfei Yu, Zeming Qi, Xiaozhe Huang, Jianting Gao
Intestinal damage and secondary bacterial translocation are caused by the inflammatory response induced by sepsis. Tongfu Lifei (TLF) decoction has a protective effect on sepsis-related gastrointestinal function injury. However, the relation between gut microbiota, immune barrier, and sepsis under the treatment of TLF have not been well clarified yet. Here, rats were subjected to cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) to create a sepsis model. Subsequently, the TLF decoction was given to CLP rats by gavage, fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT), and antibiotic were used as positive control...
May 2024: Journal of Interferon & Cytokine Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38688275/selective-refueling-of-car-t%C3%A2-cells-using-ada1-and-cd26-boosts-antitumor-immunity
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yue Hu, Abhijit Sarkar, Kevin Song, Sara Michael, Magnus Hook, Ruoning Wang, Andras Heczey, Xiaotong Song
Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy is hindered in solid tumor treatment due to the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment and suboptimal T cell persistence. Current strategies do not address nutrient competition in the microenvironment. Hence, we present a metabolic refueling approach using inosine as an alternative fuel. CAR T cells were engineered to express membrane-bound CD26 and cytoplasmic adenosine deaminase 1 (ADA1), converting adenosine to inosine. Autocrine secretion of ADA1 upon CD3/CD26 stimulation activates CAR T cells, improving migration and resistance to transforming growth factor β1 suppression...
April 22, 2024: Cell reports medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38687441/the-influence-of-exercise-on-cancer-risk-the-tumor-microenvironment-and-the-treatment-of-cancer
#39
REVIEW
Anqi He, Yamin Pu, Chengsen Jia, Mengling Wu, Hongchen He, Yong Xia
There are several modifiable factors that can be targeted to prevent and manage the occurrence and progression of cancer, and maintaining adequate exercise is a crucial one. Regular physical exercise has been shown to be a beneficial strategy in preventing cancer, potentially amplifying the effectiveness of established cancer therapies, alleviating certain cancer-related symptoms, and possibly mitigating side effects resulting from treatment. Nevertheless, the exact mechanisms by which exercise affects tumors, especially its impact on the tumor microenvironment (TME), remain uncertain...
April 30, 2024: Sports Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38687178/organosilica-nanosensors-for-monitoring-spatiotemporal-changes-in-oxygen-levels-in-bacterial-cultures
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gabriel T Huynh, Salma S Tunny, Jessica E Frith, Laurence Meagher, Simon R Corrie
Oxygen plays a central role in aerobic metabolism, and while many approaches have been developed to measure oxygen concentration in biological environments over time, monitoring spatiotemporal changes in dissolved oxygen levels remains challenging. To address this, we developed a ratiometric core-shell organosilica nanosensor for continuous, real-time optical monitoring of oxygen levels in biological environments. The nanosensors demonstrate good steady state characteristics ( K pSV = 0.40 L/mg, R 2 = 0.95) and respond reversibly to changes in oxygen concentration in buffered solutions and report similar oxygen level changes in response to bacterial cell growth ( Escherichia coli ) in comparison to a commercial bulk optode-based sensing film...
April 30, 2024: ACS Sensors
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