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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The Effects of Oxygen Glucose Deprivation and TRPM7 Activity on Slingshot Phosphatase and P-21 Activated Kinase Activity

Kola, Ervis 29 November 2013 (has links)
Transient Receptor Potential Melastatin 7 (TRPM7) is a ubiquitously expressed divalent cation channel implicated as a key regulator of neuronal cell death in stroke. Our research group has previously shown that TRPM7 dependent cytoskeletal regulation particularly via cofilin mediates neuronal death in oxygen glucose deprivation (in vitro stroke model). LIMK1 phosphorylation was also shown to decrease downstream of TRPM7 activation during anoxia. In the present study we investigated the effects of TRPM7 activation during anoxia, on three regulators of LIMK and cofilin; Rho-associated kinase 2 (ROCK2), P-21 activated kinase 3 (PAK3) and Slingshot family phosphatase 1 (SSH1). Our findings suggest that PAK3 activity is downregulated during OGD through TRPM7 independent mechanisms. However, SSH1 activity appears to be regulated downstream of TRPM7 in a manner that is consistent with LIMK and cofilin regulation. Overall, our work suggests that SSH1 is a new link between anoxia-induced TRPM7activity and cofilin hyperactivation.
2

The Effects of Oxygen Glucose Deprivation and TRPM7 Activity on Slingshot Phosphatase and P-21 Activated Kinase Activity

Kola, Ervis 29 November 2013 (has links)
Transient Receptor Potential Melastatin 7 (TRPM7) is a ubiquitously expressed divalent cation channel implicated as a key regulator of neuronal cell death in stroke. Our research group has previously shown that TRPM7 dependent cytoskeletal regulation particularly via cofilin mediates neuronal death in oxygen glucose deprivation (in vitro stroke model). LIMK1 phosphorylation was also shown to decrease downstream of TRPM7 activation during anoxia. In the present study we investigated the effects of TRPM7 activation during anoxia, on three regulators of LIMK and cofilin; Rho-associated kinase 2 (ROCK2), P-21 activated kinase 3 (PAK3) and Slingshot family phosphatase 1 (SSH1). Our findings suggest that PAK3 activity is downregulated during OGD through TRPM7 independent mechanisms. However, SSH1 activity appears to be regulated downstream of TRPM7 in a manner that is consistent with LIMK and cofilin regulation. Overall, our work suggests that SSH1 is a new link between anoxia-induced TRPM7activity and cofilin hyperactivation.
3

G?del's slingshot revisited: does russell's theory of descriptions really evade the slingshot

Oliveira, Jo?o Daniel Dantas de 30 September 2016 (has links)
Submitted by Automa??o e Estat?stica (sst@bczm.ufrn.br) on 2017-03-20T21:03:01Z No. of bitstreams: 1 JoaoDanielDantasDeOliveira_DISSERT.pdf: 571044 bytes, checksum: 360010203b2e7a5f05ef2e015399c7aa (MD5) / Approved for entry into archive by Arlan Eloi Leite Silva (eloihistoriador@yahoo.com.br) on 2017-03-23T18:18:55Z (GMT) No. of bitstreams: 1 JoaoDanielDantasDeOliveira_DISSERT.pdf: 571044 bytes, checksum: 360010203b2e7a5f05ef2e015399c7aa (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2017-03-23T18:18:55Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 JoaoDanielDantasDeOliveira_DISSERT.pdf: 571044 bytes, checksum: 360010203b2e7a5f05ef2e015399c7aa (MD5) Previous issue date: 2016-09-30 / A fam?lia de argumentos chamada ?Slingshot Arguments? ? uma fam?lia de argumentos subjacente ? vis?o fregeana de que se senten?as tem refer?ncia, a sua refer?ncia ? os seus valores de verdade. Usualmente visto como um esp?cie de argumento colapsante, o argumento consiste em demonstrar que, uma vez que voc? suponha que h? alguns itens que s?o as refer?ncias das senten?as (como fatos ou situa??es, por exemplo), estes itens colapsam em apenas dois: O Verdadeiro e O Falso. Esta ? uma disserta??o sobre o slingshot que ? denominado o slingshot de G?del. G?del argumentou que h? uma conex?o profunda entre estes argumentos e descri??es definidas. Mais precisamente, de acordo com G?del, adotando-se a interpreta??o de Russell de descri??es definidas (que diverge da vis?o de Frege de que descri??es definidas s?o termos singulares) ? poss?vel escapar do slingshot. N?s desafiamos a posi??o de G?del de duas formas, primeiramente por apresentar um slingshot mesmo com uma interpreta??o russelliana de descri??es definidas em segundo lugar por apresentar um slingshot mesmo se mudarmos de termos singulares para termos plurais ? luz do recente desenvolvimento da chamada L?gica Plural. A disserta??o est? dividida em tr?s cap?tulos. No primeiro cap?tulo apresentamos o debate entre Frege e Russell sobre descri??es definidas, no segundo cap?tulo apresentamos a posi??o de G?del e reconstru??es de seu argumento e no terceiro cap?tulo demonstramos nosso pr?prio slingshot para a L?gica Plural. Atrav?s desses resultados pretendemos concluir que podemos recuperar slingshots mesmo com uma interpreta??o russelliana de descri??es definidas ou em um contexto de L?gica Plural. / ?Slingshot Arguments? are a family of arguments underlying the Fregean view that if sentences have reference at all, their references are their truth-values. Usually seen as a kind of collapsing argument, the slingshot consists in proving that, once you suppose that there are some items that are references of sentences (as facts or situations, for example), these items collapse into just two items: The True and The False. This dissertation treats of the slingshot dubbed ?G?del?s slingshot?. G?del argued that there is a deep connection between these arguments and definite descriptions. More precisely, according to G?del, if one adopts Russell?s interpretation of definite descriptions (which clashes with Frege?s view that definite descriptions are singular terms), it is possible to evade the slingshot. We challenge G?del?s view in two manners, first by presenting a slingshot even with a Russellian interpretation of definite descriptions and second by presenting a slingshot even when we change from singular terms to plural terms in the light of new developments of the so-called Plural Logic. The text is divided in three chapters, in the first, we present the discussion between Russell and Frege regarding definite descriptions, in the second, we present G?del?s position and reconstructions of G?del?s argument and in the third we prove our slingshot argument for Plural Logic. In light of these results we conclude that we can maintain the validity of slingshot arguments even within a Russellian interpretation of definite descriptions or in the context of Plural Logic.
4

Role of the Slingshot-Cofilin and RanBP9 pathways in Alzheimer's Disease Pathogenesis

Woo, Jung A 12 October 2015 (has links)
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disorder characterized by two major pathological hallmarks, amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles. The accumulation of amyloid-β protein (Aβ) is an early event associated with synaptic and mitochondrial damage in AD. Therefore, molecular pathways underlying the neurotoxicity and generation of Aβ represent promising therapeutic targets for AD. Recent studies have shown that actin severing protein, Cofilin plays an important role in synaptic remodeling, mitochondrial dysfunction, and AD pathogenesis. However, whether Cofilin is an essential component of AD pathogenesis and how Aβ induced neurotoxicity impinges its signals to Cofilin are unclear. In my dissertation studies, we found Aβ oligomers bind with intermediate activation conformers of β1-integrin to induce the loss of surface β1-integrin and activation of Cofilin via Slingshot homology-1 (SSH1) activation. Specifically, conditional loss of β1-integrin prevented Aβ induced Cofilin activation, and allosteric modulation or activation of β1-integrin significantly reduced Aβ binding to neurons and mitigated Aβ42-induced reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation, mitochondrial dysfunction, synaptic proteins depletion, and apoptosis. Furthermore, we found that SSH1 reduction, which mitigated Cofilin activation, prevented Aβ-induced mitochondrial Cofilin translocation and apoptosis, while AD brain mitochondria contained significantly increased activated/oxidized Cofilin. In mechanistic support in vivo, we demonstrated that APP transgenic mice brains contain decreased SSH/Cofilin and SSH1/14-3-3 complexes which indicates that SSH-Cofilin activation occurred by releasing of SSH from 14-3-3. We also showed that genetic reduction in Cofilin rescues APP/Aβ-induced synaptic protein loss and gliosis, as well as impairments in synaptic plasticity and contextual memory in vivo. Our lab previously found that overexpression of the scaffolding protein RanBP9 increases Aβ production in cell lines and in transgenic mice, while promoting Cofilin activation and mitochondrial dysfunction. However, how endogenous RanBP9 activates cofilin and whether endogenous RanBP9 accelerates Aβ-induced deficits in synaptic plasticity, cofilin-dependent pathology, and cognitive impairments were unknown. In my dissertation studies, we found that endogenous RanBP9 positively regulates SSH1 levels and mediates A-induced translocation of Cofilin to mitochondria. Moreover, we demonstrated that endogenous RanBP9 mediates A-induced formation of Cofilin-actin rods in primary neurons. Endogenous level of RanBP9 was also required for Aβ-induced collapse of growth cones in immature neurons and depletion of synaptic proteins in mature neurons. In vivo, we also found APP transgenic mice exhibit significantly increased endogenous RanBP9 levels and that genetic reduction in RanBP9 rescued APP/Aβ-induced synaptic protein loss, gliosis, synaptic plasticity impairments, and contextual memory deficits. These findings indicated that endogenous RanBP9 not only promotes Aβ production but also meditate Aβ induced neurotoxicity via positively regulating SSH1. Taken together, these novel findings implicate essential involvement of β1-integrin–SSH1/RanBP9–Cofilin pathway in mitochondrial and synaptic dysfunction in AD pathogenesis.
5

Synthesis of Novel Agents for the treatment of Infectious and Neurodegenerative diseases

Eduful, Benjamin Joe 02 April 2018 (has links)
Infectious and neurodegenerative diseases continue to be a major concern worldwide. In spite of the great advances in drug therapy for treating various infectious and neurodegenerative diseases, there is still an urgent need for new and improved drugs due to increasing drug resistance among pathogens, emergence of new pathogens, ease of transmission of infections, ineffective available treatments, toxicity associated with current standard of care, aging populations and the lack of better alternative treatment options. The first part of this manuscript (chapters 1 - 5) describes the synthesis of novel agents active against Leishmania donovani. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), a significant number of deaths worldwide can be attributed to infectious diseases – particularly neglected tropical diseases (NTDs), one of which is leishmaniasis - a complex and clinically diverse disease transmitted through the bite of an infected female phlebotomine sand-fly. The pathogen that causes leishmaniasis develops through a complex life cycle via different morphological changes. Its clinical presentations range from the less severe (cutaneous) to lethal/fatal (visceral) forms depending upon the level of systemic involvement, infecting species and the endemic environment. Treatments (and vaccines) must be species-specific to be particularly effective since sensitivity to commonly used drugs is largely species-specific. Heat shock protein 90 (Hsp 90) has been shown to promote the differentiation of the protozoan parasite that causes leishmaniasis from the promastigote stage to the amastigote pathogenic stages. To this end a series of compounds were prepared based on known Hsp 90 inhibitors, SNX2112 and XL888. The synthetic approach allows the probing of a hydrophobic pocket and rapid access to a collection of anti-leishmanial compounds. The most active compound, was found to be more than twice as active as the climivally used drug, miltefosine, in an infected J774 macrophage at IC50 = 0.65 µM. The second part of this manuscript (chapters 6 - 9) describes the synthesis novel anti-Alzheimer’s agents. Alzheimer’s disease is a progressive neurodegenerative disease believed to be caused by tau hyperphosphorylation and plaque aggregation in the brain. It is known to affect about 44 million people worldwide and it is marked as the 6th leading cause of death in the United States. Slingshot homology-1 (SSH1) proteins, important protein phosphatases, are promising targets for the discovery of a new generation of small molecule inhibitors as treatment for Alzheimer’s disease, since SSH1 is known to contribute to both tau hyperphosphorylation and plaque aggregation in the brain. Through structure and activity relationships (SAR) studies, two (2) series of compounds were synthesized, thiazoles and pyridones, bearing a carboxylic acid or phosphonic acid functionality as inhibitors of SSH1 enzymes. In the preliminary screening efforts against SSH1 phosphatase activity, the thiazole series were found to be more potent at inhibiting the phosphatase activity than the pyridone series. Among the active thiazole series, eight (8) analogs exhibited significant inhibitory activity over the initial hit compound, observed via phosphatase inhibition curves (using a pNPP phosphatase assay). Further investigations into the molecular target (SSH1) are currently underway.
6

[en] FREGE, TRUTHMAKERS AND THE SLINGSHOT ARGUMENT / [pt] FREGE, FAZEDORES-DE-VERDADE E O ARGUMENTO DA FUNDA

ABILIO AZAMBUJA RODRIGUES FILHO 18 October 2007 (has links)
[pt] A intuição básica da noção de verdade como correspondência é que se uma proposição (ou sentença) p é verdadeira, então existe um s tal que s é o fazedor-de-verdade (truthmaker) de p. Essa idéia tem um apelo especialmente forte no que diz respeito a proposições verdadeiras em virtude de fenômenos ou objetos empíricos. Por outro lado, se não há alternativa para a tese de Frege segundo a qual a referência de uma sentença é o seu valor de verdade, uma teoria da verdade como correspondência é inviável. O argumento da funda (the slingshot argument) pretende defender a tese de Frege e inviabilizar uma teoria da verdade como correspondência. Os meus objetivos aqui são (i) investigar o que levou Frege a concluir que a referência de uma sentença é seu valor de verdade e (ii) investigar se uma teoria de fazedores-de-verdade de verdades empíricas evita o argumento da funda. / [en] The basic idea of the notion of truth as correspondence is that if a proposition (or sentence) p is true, then there is an s such that s makes p true (i.e. s is a truthmaker of p). This idea has a strong intuitive appeal, especially with respect to propositions (or sentences) true in virtue of empirical phenomena. On the other hand, if there is no alternative to Frege's thesis according to which the reference of a sentence is its truth-value, a theory of truth as correspondence seems to be undermined from the start. The slingshot argument intends to defend Frege's thesis and to undermine theories of truth as correspondence. My aims here are (i) to investigate why Frege concluded that the reference of a sentence is its truth- value and (ii) to investigate whether or not a truthmaker theory of empirical truths can avoid the slingshot argument.
7

Structure Based Drug Design Targeting Bacterial Antibiotic Resistance and Alzheimer's Disease

Lewandowski, Eric Michael 13 October 2015 (has links)
Structure based drug design is a rapidly advancing discipline that examines how protein targets structurally interact with small molecules, or known inhibitors, and then uses this information to lead inhibitor optimization efforts. In the case of novel inhibitors, protein structural information is first obtained via X-ray crystallography, NMR studies, or a combination of both approaches. Then, computational molecular docking is often used to screen, in silico, millions of small molecules and calculate the potential interactions they may have with the target protein’s binding pocket, in hopes of identifying novel low affinity inhibitors. By examining the interactions these small, low affinity, inhibitors have with the binding pocket, optimization efforts can be focused on maximizing interactions with “hot spots” within the pocket, thus leading to larger, high affinity inhibitors. A similar optimization technique can also be applied to known inhibitors. By examining the interactions of a known inhibitor with the binding site, new compounds can be designed to target “hot spots” in the binding pocket using the known inhibitors core structure as a starting point. The affinity of the newly designed compounds can then be compared to the affinity of the original inhibitor, and further rounds of optimization can be carried out. While simple in design, there are many challenges associated with structure based drug design studies, and there is no guarantee novel inhibitors will be found, but ultimately, it is an extremely powerful methodology that results in a much higher hit rate than other, similar, techniques. The work herein describes the use of structure based drug design to target several different proteins involved in bacterial antibiotic resistance, and a protein that has been implicated in the development of Alzheimer’s disease. The goal of the first project was to design a new PBP inhibitor based upon an existing scaffold, and to better understand the binding mechanism and molecular interactions between penicillin binding proteins and their inhibitors. PBPs are a group of proteins that catalyze the last steps of bacterial cell wall formation, and are the targets of the β-lactam antibiotics. Two compounds were designed which conjugated a ferrocene or ruthenocene group to 6-aminopenicillinic acid, and their antibiotic properties were tested against a range of bacterial strains. To get a better understanding of how the 6-APA organometallic compounds interacted with the PBP active site, a CTX-M-14 β-lactamase model system was used for X-ray crystallographic studies. CTX-M-14 was chosen as its active site shares many key catalytic features with PBPs, and it easily, and reproducibly, yields crystals capable of diffracting to sub-atomic (< 1.0 Å) resolution. I determined a 1.18 Å structure of 6-APA-Ru in complex with CTX-M-14 E166A β-lactamase and was able to gain unprecedented details of the interactions of the ruthenocene group with the CTX-M active site. This structure also revealed that the compound bound in the CTX-M active site was actually the decarboxylated and hydrolyzed product, which was the first time a decarboxylated product had been captured in the CTX-M active site. A second, 0.85 Å, structure of CTX-M in complex with 6-APA-Ru was determined and shed light on how the hydrogen bonding network in the CTX-M active site changes in response to the 6-APA-Ru product binding. A final, 1.30 Å, structure captured the carboxylated and hydrolyzed 6-APA-Ru product in complex with CTX-M, which was the first time the carboxylated product had been captured in the CTX-M active with the catalytic Ser70 residue intact. The results show the potential of the ruthenocene group in improving antibiotic potency, and help to better elucidate the changes that occur in the CTX-M active site upon inhibitor binding, while at the same time, telling us what changes could occur in the active site of PBPs. The next project was focused on novel inhibitor discovery against several different PBPs. PBPs have been successfully inhibited by β-lactam antibiotics for decades, but the alarming rise of bacteria resistant to these antibiotics has placed increased urgency on the discovery of novel PBP inhibitors. A fragment based molecular docking approach was employed to virtually screen millions of small compounds for interactions with the targeted active sites, and then high scoring compounds were selected for visual inspection and inhibitory testing. Virtual screening was first done against Staphylococcus aureus monofunctional transglycosylase, a type of PBP. MTG provided a good binding pocket for virtual screening, but proved challenging to purify and crystallize. However, through great effort MTG crystals were eventually obtained. After repeated rounds of virtual screening against MTG, multiple compounds were selected for inhibition testing, and testing is currently ongoing. Virtual screening was also done against Pseudomonas aeruginosa PBP5 and PBP1a. Purification and crystallization of these proteins proved to be easier than MTG, and both yielded diffraction quality crystals. The final project focused on virtual screening against a protein implicated in the development of Alzheimer’s disease, Slingshot Phosphatase 1. The brains of AD patients have been found to contain elevated levels of active Cofilin, and these elevated levels of active Cofilin may lead to the overproduction of amyloid β. Aβ overproduction, and its resulting accumulation, is believed to be one of the pathways that lead to AD symptoms. Cofilin is activated when it is dephosphorylated by SSH1, and inhibiting this activation may decrease the production of Aβ and the development of AD symptoms. There is no known structure of SSH1, so to perform virtual screening a SSH1 homology model was constructed using the homolog SSH2 as a starting point. Virtual screening was then performed using the SSH1 homology model and many compounds were selected for inhibition testing. Initial testing found several compounds that could prevent Cofilin dephosphorylation at levels > 10μM. However, three compounds were found to be exceptionally active, and could prevent Cofilin dephosphorylation at both 1 and 10 μM. One of these three compounds was tested directly against purified SSH1 and found to inhibit its activity, and reduce Aβ production. Crystallization of purified SSH1, and SSH2, was attempted in order to get complex structures with the three best compounds. SSH2 crystals were obtained which diffracted to 1.91 Å, and several initial hits were found for SSH1. Optimization of crystals for both proteins is currently ongoing. The SSH1 inhibitor, along with the two other highly active compounds, provides an excellent starting point for the development of highly potent SSH1 inhibitors.
8

Drop impact splashing and air entrapment

Thoraval, Marie-Jean 03 1900 (has links)
Drop impact is a canonical problem in fluid mechanics, with numerous applications in industrial as well as natural phenomena. The extremely simple initial configuration of the experiment can produce a very large variety of fast and complex dynamics. Scientific progress was made in parallel with major improvements in imaging and computational technologies. Most recently, high-speed imaging video cameras have opened the exploration of new phenomena occurring at the micro-second scale, and parallel computing allowed realistic direct numerical simulations of drop impacts. We combine these tools to bring a new understanding of two fundamental aspects of drop impacts: splashing and air entrapment. The early dynamics of a drop impacting on a liquid pool at high velocity produces an ejecta sheet, emerging horizontally in the neck between the drop and the pool. We show how the interaction of this thin liquid sheet with the air, the drop or the pool, can produce micro-droplets and bubble rings. Then we detail how the breakup of the air film stretched between the drop and the pool for lower impact velocities can produce a myriad of micro-bubbles.

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