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Testování antioxidačních vlastností vybraných inhibitorů acetylcholinesterasy / Testing antioxidant properties of selected acetylcholinesterase inhibitorsKucková, Jana January 2018 (has links)
Charles University Faculty of Pharmacy in Hradec Králové Department of Pharmacology & Toxicology Student: Jana Kucková Supervisor: PharmDr. Marie Vopršalová, CSc. Title of diploma thesis: Testing antioxidant properties of selected acetylcholinesterase inhibitors Very widespread Alzheimer's disease is typical by a complex pathology. Its causality is not clearly understood. There is increasing discussion due to the negative impact of free radicals on this disease formation. There are testing new substances that have also antioxidant properties, in addition to their classical effects. The aim of this diploma thesis is spectrophotometric testing of antioxidant properties of selected acetylcholinesterase inhibitors. It is based on DPPH test where the presence of antioxidants with antiradical activity causes the reduction of the color stable 2,2-diphenyl-1- picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) radical to a colorless molecule. The principle of the method is the measurement of decrease in absorbance (decolorization) of selected substances that are directly proportional to the antioxidant (antiradical) efficacy of the analyzed inhibitors. It focuses on twelve samples, Phenothiazine, which is the leader structure of new inhibitors synthesis, and two standards. Antioxidant activity is expressed as the effective...
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Immobilisation of electric eel acetylcholinesterase on nanofibres electrospun from a nylon and chitosan blendMafuma, Tendai Simbarashe January 2013 (has links)
Organophosphates and carbamates are potent inhibitors of the neurotransmitter acetylcholinesterase. This inhibition results in the blocking of nerve signal transference into the post synaptic neuron leading to loss of muscle action and death. Because of the universal mechanisms of signal transduction in animals, these inhibitors have been widely used as agricultural pesticides as well as chemical warfare agents (nerve agents). Health issues associated with pesticide usage result from the fact that both the pesticides and their breakdown products often end up in water and food sources as well as in the soil. As a result, there has been an increase in the number of studies aimed at the detection of these pesticides in the environment. One popular research area is enzyme based biosensor construction. Some important criteria for consideration during the construction of biosensors are the importance of a suitable solid support as well as the enzyme immobilisation method. Recently, there has been increased interest in using nano-scale material e.g. using nanoparticles as enzyme support material. This is largely due to their advantages such as large surface area to volume ratio as well as reduced mass transfer resistance. Electrospinning is a straight forward and cost effective method for producing nanofibres from any soluble polymer(s). The applications of electrospun nanofibres have been reported in clinical studies, biofuel production as well as bioremediation. In this study two polymers were selected: nylon for its mechanical stability and chitosan for its biocompatibility and hydrophilicity, for the fabrication of electrospun nanofibres which would function as immobilisation support material for acetylcholinesterase. The first objective of this study was to electrospin nanofibres from a nylon-6 and chitosan blend solution. A binary solvent system consisting of formic acid and acetic acid (50:50) successfully dissolved and blended the polymers which were subsequently electrospun. Scanning electron microscopy characterisation of the nanofibres showed that (i) a nylon-6: chitosan ratio of 16%: 3% resulted in the formation of bead free nanofibres and (ii) the fibres were collected in non-woven mats characterised by different size nanofibres with average diameters of 250 nm for the main fibres and 40 nm for the smaller nanofibres. Fourier transform infra-red (FT-IR) analysis of the nanofibres indicated that a new product had been formed during the blending of the two polymers. The second aim of the study was to carry out a facile immobilisation of electric eel acetylcholinesterase via glutaraldehyde (GA) cross-linking. Glutaraldehyde solution 5% (v/v) resulted in the immobilisation of 0.334 mg/cm² of acetylcholinesterase onto the nanofibres. The immobilisation procedure was optimised with reference to acetylcholinestease and crosslinker concentrations, incubation time and the cross-linking method. A comparative investigation into the optimum pH and temperature conditions, pH and thermal stabilities, substrate and inhibition kinetics was then carried out on free and immobilised acetylcholinesterase. The final objective of this study was to determine the storage stabilities of the immobilised and free enzymes as well as the reusability characteristics of the immobilised acetylcholinesterase. Several conclusions were drawn from this study. Acetylcholinesterase was successfully immobilised onto the surface of nylon-6:chitosan nanofibres with retention of its activity. There was a shift in the pH optimum of the immobilised acetylcholineseterase by 0.5 units towards a neutral pH. Although both free and immobilised acetylcholinesterase exhibited the same optimum temperature, immobilised acetylcholinesterase showed enhanced thermal stability. In terms of pH stability, immobilised acetylcholinesterase showed greater stability at acidic pH whilst free acetylcholinesterase was more stable under alkaline pH conditions. Relative to free acetylcholinesterase, the immobilised enzyme showed considerable storage stability retaining ~50% of its activity when stored for 49 days at 4°C. Immobilised acetylcholinesterase also retained > 20% of its initial activity after 9 consecutive reuse cycles. When exposed to fixed concentrations of carbofuran or demeton-S-methyl sulfone, immobilised acetylcholinesterase showed similar inhibition characteristics to that of the free enzyme. The decrease in enzyme activity observed after immobilisation to the nanofibres may have been due to several reasons which include some enzyme molecules being immobilised in structural conformations which reduced substrate access to the catalytic site, participation of the catalytic residues in immobilisation and enzyme denaturation due to the reaction conditions used for acetylcholinesterase immobilisation. Similar observations have been widely reported in literature and this is one of the major drawbacks of enzyme immobilisation. In conclusion, nylon-6:chitosan electrospun nanofibres were shown to be suitable supports for facile acetylcholinesterase immobilisation and the immobilised enzyme has potential for use in pesticide detection. Future recommendations for this study include a comparative study of the GA cross-linking method for AChE immobilisation which will lead to more intensely bound enzyme molecules to prevent non-specific binding. An investigation into the effect of inhibitors on stored immobilised AChE, as well as reactivation and reuse studies, may also be useful for determining the cost-effectiveness of reusing immobilised AChE for pesticide detection in environmental water samples. Several models have been designed for the determination of the kinetic parameters for immobilised enzymes. These take into account the mass transfer resistance as well as the overall charge of the immobilisation matrix. The use of these models to analyse experimental data will give a clear understanding of the effects of immobilisation on enzyme activity
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Identification des récepteurs cholinergiques impliqués dans le fonctionnement du cortex visuel du rongeurGroleau, Marianne 07 1900 (has links)
Le système cholinergique est impliqué dans les phénomènes d’attention, de mémoire et d’apprentissage et les récepteurs cholinergiques régulent de multiples fonctions du système nerveux central. Néanmoins, leur rôle au niveau de la modulation des propriétés du cortex visuel reste à être établi. L’un des objectifs de cette thèse était d’étudier le rôle des récepteurs muscariniques impliqués dans le fonctionnement normal du cortex visuel. Nous avons pu déterminer que les récepteurs muscariniques sont impliqués dans l’établissement de nombreuses propriétés visuelles telles la taille des champs récepteurs, la sensibilité au contraste, la sélectivité à la fréquence spatiale et la finesse de la connectivité corticale. L’autre objectif était d’identifier les récepteurs cholinergiques impliqués dans la potentiation des capacités visuelles. Nous avons amélioré le traitement cognitif de l’information visuelle par stimulation électrique du télencéphale basal (noyau où sont localisés les corps cellulaires cholinergiques) et par la stimulation cholinergique par le donépézil, un inhibiteur de l’acétylcholinestérase. La combinaison répétée d’une stimulation visuelle et cholinergique (qu’elle soit électrique ou pharmacologique) améliore similairement l’activité corticale visuelle. Toutefois, les récepteurs impliqués ne sont pas les mêmes. Suite à la stimulation pharmacologique, ce sont principalement les récepteurs muscariniques qui influencent l’acuité visuelle de manière tardive et cette modulation est plus précoce lors de la stimulation électrique. Ces résultats démontrent que le couplage répétitif d’une stimulation cholinergique et d’une stimulation visuelle est en mesure d’améliorer l’activité corticale visuelle. Le fait de connaître les récepteurs cholinergiques impliqués permettra dans un futur proche de les cibler directement pour améliorer la fonction corticale. / The cholinergic system is involved in attention, learning and memory and cholinergic receptors regulate multiple functions of the central nervous system. Nevertheless, their role in modulating the properties of the visual cortex remains to be established. One of the objectives of this thesis was to study the role of muscarinic receptors involved in the normal function of the visual cortex. We have been able to determine that the muscarinic receptors are involved in the establishment of many visual properties such as the size of the receptor fields, contrast sensitivity, spatial frequency selectivity and accuracy of the cortical connectivity. The other objective was to identify the cholinergic receptors involved in the potentiation of visual abilities. We improved the cognitive processing of visual information by electrical stimulation of the basal forebrain (the nucleus where the cholinergic cell bodies are located) and by cholinergic stimulation using donepezil, an acetylcholinesterase inhibitor. The repeated combination of visual and cholinergic stimulations (whether electrical or pharmacological) similarly enhances visual cortical activity. However, the receptors involved are not the same. Following the pharmacological stimulation, it is mainly the muscarinic receptors that influence visual acuity with a delay in the receptors expression and this modulation is earlier for the electrical stimulation. These results demonstrate that repetitive coupling of cholinergic stimulation and visual stimulation can enhance visual cortical activity. Knowing the cholinergic receptors involved will allow in a near future to target them directly to improve cortical function.
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L’effet d’une potentialisation cholinergique sur la régionalisation et la synchronisation corticale d’un conditionnement visuelLaliberté, Guillaume 12 1900 (has links)
Cette thèse démontre qu’une potentialisation cholinergique durant un conditionnement visuel typique permet de raffiner la réponse et la connectivité des neurones des aires corticales visuelles ainsi que des aires associatives supérieures via un phénomène plastique. Afin de déterminer cet effet sur un conditionnement visuel monoculaire sur la réponse corticale, nous avons utilisé un système d’imagerie calcique à large champ sur des souris adultes exprimant le rapporteur calcique GCaMP6s. La potentialisation cholinergique était causée par l’administration de donepezil (DPZ), un inhibiteur de l’acétylcholinestérase qui dégrade l’acétylcholine.
Cette technique, possédant de bonnes résolutions spatiale et temporelle, a permis l’observation de l’activité neuronale dans les couches supra granulaires du cortex visuel primaire (V1), des aires secondaires (A, AL, AM, LM, PM, RL) ainsi que dans le cortex retrosplénial (RSC). Il a été alors possible de mesurer les modifications d’activité neuronale de ces aires au repos et lors de la présentation de stimulations visuelles, composées de réseaux sinusoïdaux d’orientation et de contraste varié.
La réponse corticale des animaux naïfs est similaire en matière d’amplitude et de sensibilité au contraste pour chacune des orientations de stimulations visuelles présentées. Le conditionnement visuel accompagné de l’administration de DPZ diminue significativement la réponse neuronale évoquée par le stimulus conditionné dans la majorité des aires observés alors qu’il ne modifie pas la réponse à la stimulation non conditionnée. Cet effet n’est pas présent sans potentialisation cholinergique. Il est intéressant de noter qu’un effet sur la corrélation d’activation est observé exclusivement dans les aires de la voie visuelle ventrale. Finalement, le conditionnement monoculaire diminue la corrélation au repos entre les aires visuelles monoculaire et binoculaire de chacun des hémisphères, un effet qui disparaît lors de l’administration du DPZ durant le conditionnement.
En conclusion, nos résultats démontrent une diminution de l’amplitude et de l’étalement de la réponse corticale dans les couches supra-granulaires de PM et de V1 en réponse à notre traitement. Nous suggérons que ces résultats démontrent une diminution de la réponse excitatrice causée par l’augmentation de l’activité inhibitrice en réponse à la stimulation conditionnée. / The cholinergic system of the basal forebrain modulates the visual cortex and enhances visual acuity and discrimination when activated during visual conditioning. As wide-field calcium imaging provides cortical maps with a fine regional and temporal resolution, we used this technique to determine the effects of the cholinergic potentiation of visual conditioning on cortical activity and connectivity in the visual cortex and higher associative areas. Mesoscopic calcium imaging was performed in head-fixed GCaMP6s adult mice during resting state or monocular presentation of conditioned (0.03 cpd, 30°, 100% contrast) or non-conditioned 1Hz-drifting gratings (30°, 50 and 75% contrast; 90°, 50, 75 and 100% contrast), before and after conditioning. The conditioned stimulus was presented 10 min daily for a week. Donepezil (DPZ, 0.3 mg/kg, s.c.), a cholinesterase inhibitor that potentiates cholinergic transmission, or saline were injected prior to each conditioning session and compared to a sham-conditioned group. Cortical maps were established, then amplitude, duration, and latency of the peak response, as well as size of activation were measured in the primary visual cortex (V1), secondary visual areas (AL, A, AM, PM, LM, RL), the retrosplenial cortex (RSC) , and higher cortical areas. Visual stimulation increased calcium signaling in all primary and secondary visual areas, but no other cortices (except RSC). The cortical responses were sensitive to contrast but not to grating orientation. There were no significant effects of sham-conditioning or conditioning alone, but DPZ treatment during conditioning significantly decreased the evoked neuronal activity response for the conditioned stimulus in V1, AL, PM, and LM. The size of activated area and signal-to-noise ratio were affected in some cortical areas. There was no effect for the non-conditioned stimuli. Interestingly, signal correlation appeared only between V1 and the ventral visual pathway and RSC and was decreased by DPZ administration. The resting state activity was slightly correlated and rarely affected by treatments, except between binocular and monocular V1 in both hemispheres. In conclusion, despite the previously observed enhancement of the cortical response of layer 4 after visual conditioning with cholinergic potentiation, mesoscale cortical calcium imaging showed that cholinergic potentiation diminished the cortical activation in layer 2/3 and sharpened the responses to the conditioned visual stimulus in V1 and PM, via a layer-dependent effect.
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Screening of traditional Chinese medicine for anti-Alzheimer's disease drugs.January 2005 (has links)
by Wong Kin Kwan Kelvin. / Thesis submitted in: September 2004. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2005. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 91-101). / Abstracts in English and Chinese. / Acknowledgements --- p.i / Abstract --- p.ii / 摘要 --- p.iv / Abbreviations --- p.x / List of Figures --- p.xiii / List of Tables --- p.xiv / Chapter Chapter 1 --- Intorduction --- p.1 / Chapter 1.1 --- Alzheimer,s disease --- p.1 / Chapter 1.2 --- Histopathological features --- p.1 / Chapter 1.3 --- Tau protein pathology and AD --- p.4 / Chapter 1.4 --- Tau protein kinase I (TPKI)- GSK-3β --- p.6 / Chapter 1.5 --- Tau protein kinase II (TPKII)- Cyclin dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5) --- p.8 / Chapter 1.6 --- Available treatment --- p.9 / Chapter 1.7 --- Objectives of the present study --- p.12 / Chapter Chapter 2 --- Screening for GSK-3p inhibitors from Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) --- p.13 / Chapter 2.1 --- Introduction --- p.13 / Chapter 2.1.1 --- Phosphorylation of tau in AD --- p.13 / Chapter 2.1.2 --- Gsk-3p inhibitors --- p.14 / Chapter 2.1.3 --- Screening of GSK-3β inhibitor from TCM --- p.16 / Chapter 2.2 --- Material and Methods --- p.18 / Chapter 2.2.1 --- Preparation of extracts and fractions (AOF1-5) --- p.18 / Chapter 2.2.2 --- General cell culture techniques --- p.21 / Chapter 2.2.3 --- "3-(4,5-dimethyltiazoI-2-yl)-2, 5-diphenyl-tetrazolium (MTT) assay of AOF" --- p.23 / Chapter 2.2.4 --- Recombinant DNA techniques --- p.23 / Chapter 2.2.5 --- Transfection of GSK-3β and tau cDNA into COS7 cells --- p.28 / Chapter 2.2.6 --- Extraction of total proteins from culture cells --- p.28 / Chapter 2.2.7 --- Quantitation of protein by the Bradford method --- p.29 / Chapter 2.2.8 --- Protein separation by sodium dodecylsulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) --- p.29 / Chapter 2.2.9 --- Western blot analysis --- p.31 / Chapter 2.2.10 --- GSK-3β kinase assay --- p.32 / Chapter 2.2.11 --- Determination of lithium content by atomic adsorption spectrophotometry --- p.34 / Chapter 2.3 --- Results --- p.35 / Chapter 2.3.1 --- Establishment of a co-transfected cell model for GSK-3β induced tau hyperphosphorylation --- p.35 / Chapter 2.3.2 --- Preliminary screening results of aqueous and ethanol extracts (AOF1 and AOF2) --- p.37 / Chapter 2.3.3 --- Ethanol extract of AOF inhibits GSK-3p induced tau phosphorylation in COS-7 cells --- p.40 / Chapter 2.3.5 --- Effect of the essential oils of AOF on GSK-3P induced tau phosphorylation --- p.46 / Chapter 2.3.6 --- The effect of AOF essential oil on GSK-3P activity in COS7 --- p.50 / Chapter 2.3.7 --- Lithium content of AOF extracts --- p.52 / Chapter 2.4 --- Discussion --- p.54 / Chapter Chapter 4 --- Evaluation of the in vivo efficacy of cryptotenshinone (CT) in Morris Water Maze Task (WMT) --- p.59 / Chapter 4.1 --- Introduction --- p.59 / Chapter 4.1.1 --- Involvement of Cholinergic system in cognitive dysfunction in AD --- p.59 / Chapter 4.1.2 --- Animal model for Alzheimer's disease --- p.60 / Chapter 4.1.3 --- Morris Watermaze Task (WMT) --- p.61 / Chapter 4.2 --- MATERIAL AND METHODS --- p.64 / Chapter 4.2.1 --- Morris Water maze setup --- p.64 / Chapter 4.2.2 --- Animal model --- p.66 / Chapter 4.2.3 --- Drug preparation --- p.67 / Chapter 4.2.4 --- Toxicity test of CT --- p.67 / Chapter 4.2.5 --- Water maze task (WMT) --- p.68 / Chapter 4.2.6 --- Visual acuity test --- p.73 / Chapter 4.3 --- RESULTS --- p.74 / Chapter 4.3.1 --- Chronic crytotanshinone treatment does not cause hepatic damages to the mice --- p.74 / Chapter 4.3.2 --- Training Session --- p.76 / Chapter 4.4 --- DISCUSSION --- p.85 / Chapter Chapter 5 --- General Discussion and Future Directions --- p.87 / Chapter 5.1 --- "AOF, the potential GSK-3 inhibitor" --- p.87 / Chapter 5.2 --- CT´ؤthe AChEI --- p.88 / References --- p.91 / Appendix --- p.102 / Chapter A1 --- Reagents for SDS-PAGE --- p.103 / Chapter A3 --- Solution components provided by QIAGEN Plasmid Maxipreps kit --- p.108 / Chapter A4 --- Reagents and medium for cell culture --- p.109 / Chapter A5 --- Reagents for kinase assay --- p.110 / Chapter A6 --- Raw data of figures --- p.112 / Chapter A7 --- Plasmid map of PCI-neo --- p.119
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