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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

Neuronal populations underlying locomotion in zebrafish / Neurones sous-tendant la locomotion chez le poisson zèbre

Sternberg, Jenna 20 September 2016 (has links)
Les circuits neuronaux sous-tendant la locomotion requièrent d'intégrer à la fois des stimuli sensoriels et l'état physiologique. Cependant, la manière dont ces circuits fonctionnent pendant la locomotion active reste peu comprise. La larve de poisson zèbre est un organisme vertébré idéal pour étudier cette question de part son répertoire locomoteur simple et son accessibilité à la manipulation génétique. Dans le Chapitre 1, je décris le logiciel que nous avons développé afin de nous permettre de traquer les comportements et caractériser automatiquement les modules locomoteurs à haut débit. Les interneurones V2a sont des neurones excitateurs de la moelle épinière et du cerveau postérieur caractérisés par l'expression du facteur de transcription chx10. Afin de tester leur implication dans la locomotion, j'ai, dans le Chapitre 2, validé l'utilisation d'une toxine génétiquement encodée dans le but d'inhiber la population chx10 positive in vivo. Par analyse comportementale, enregistrements de locomotion fictive et imagerie calcique, nous avons montré que les V2as sont impliqués différemment dans la locomotion lente et rapide. Les neurones contactant le liquide céphalorachidien (NcLCRs) relaient des informations sensorielles aux circuits moteurs. Par ciblage génétique, imagerie calcique, pharmacologie et électrophysiologie, j'ai, dans le Chapitre 3, investigué le rôle de l'activité spontanée dans les NcLCRs. J'ai montré que l'ouverture de canaux PKD2L1 représentait une source intrinsèque d'activité spontanée dans les NcLCRs. Ces résultats offrent une meilleure compréhension de la manière dont les interactions dynamiques structurent les sorties locomotrices in vivo. / The neural networks that underlie locomotion are complex and require integration of sensory input and physiological state. However, how these networks function during active locomotion to incorporate sensory input from the environment and the internal state of the animal remains poorly understand. The zebrafish larva is an ideal vertebrate to study these questions thanks to its simple locomotor repertoire, transparency, and amenability to genetic manipulation. In Chapter 1, I describe a program to track behavior at high speeds and automatically characterize locomotor patterns in a high-throughput manner. V2a interneurons are excitatory interneurons in the spinal cord and hindbrain identified by the chx10 transcription factor. In Chapter 2, I validated the use of a genetically-encoded botulinum toxin to silence the chx10 population in vivo. Using fictive locomotor recordings and calcium imaging, I demonstrated that silencing V2as leads to decreased activity in primary motor neurons during fast swimming, corresponding to a lower swimming frequency in V2a-silenced larvae. Cerebrospinal fluid-contacting neurons (CSF-cNs) are intraspinal neurons that relay sensory information to motor circuits. CSF-cNs in diverse species express GABA and the transient receptor potential channel PKD2L1. In Chapter 3, I used genetic targeting, calcium imaging, pharmacology, and electrophysiology to investigate the role of spontaneous activity in CSF-cNs. I showed that single channel opening of PKD2L1 represents an intrinsic source of spontaneous activity in CSF-cNs. These tools and results will allow a more complete picture of how dynamic interactions shape locomotor output in vivo.
2

Evolution of Neurotoxins: From Research Modalities to Clinical Realities

Kostrzewa, Richard M. 12 February 2009 (has links)
In the 1950s, the discovery of anti-nerve growth factor, an immunotoxin stunting sympathetic neural development, signaled the advent of neurotoxins as research modalities. Other selective neurotoxins were discovered in rapid succession. In the 1960s, 6-hydroxydopamine and 6-hydroxydopa were shown to destroy noradrenergic and dopaminergic nerves. Excitotoxins (glutamate, aspartate, and analogs) were discovered in the 1970s. DSP-4 [N-(2-chloroethyl)-N-ethyl-2-bromobenzylamine] proved to be selective for noradrenergic destruction, while 5,6-and 5, 7-dihydroxytryptamines were relatively selective for serotonin neurons. Additional neurotoxins were discovered, but it was MPTP (1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine) that predominated neurotoxicity research in the 1980s. Eventually, Clostridium botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT), discovered as a "poisonous" principle in the late 1800s, resurfaced in purified and standardized forms as a clinically useful drug. Neurotoxins represent chemical tools, useful not only for discerning neuronal mechanisms and animal modeling of neurological disorders, but also for their use in medicine and potential as treatments for medical disorders. This unit reviews the early discovery of neurotoxins, describes categories of neurotoxins, and finally characterizes their usefulness - first as research tools, and eventually as clinical therapeutic agents.
3

Botulinum Neurotoxin: Evolution From Poison, to Research Tool - Onto Medicinal Therapeutic and Future Pharmaceutical Panacea

Kostrzewa, Richard M., Segura-Aguilar, Juan 01 December 2007 (has links)
Botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT), for more than a hundred years, has been a recognized poisonous principle in spoiled food. As its chemical structure became unraveled, and as more knowledge was gained over its mechanism of toxicity, it became clear that BoNT had the potential to act therapeutically as a targeted toxin that could inactivate specific nerve populations, and thus achieve a therapeutic goal. BoNT has evolved over the past 25 years into a viable therapeutic, now being a first line treatment for dystonia, overtly altering the course of progression of this disorder. BoNT is used for hyperhidrosis and gustatory sweating syndrome, alleviation of pain, as a treatment for overactive bladder, achalasia and anal fissure; and it has gained popularity as a cosmetic aid. Many other possible uses are being explored. The greatest potential for BoNT may lie in its being a molecular Trojan Horse - able to carry a specific enzyme or specific drug to the inside of a cancer or other type of cell while bypassing other cells and thereby having little or no ill effect. BoNTs pharmaceutical potential is boundless.
4

Thermodynamic Evidence That Ganglioside-Mediated Insertion Of Botulinum A Into The Cholinergic Nerve Ending May Precede Endocytosis And Acidification: A Langmuir Film Study

Strongin, Bradley Adam 14 December 2007 (has links) (PDF)
Botulinum Neurotoxin (BoNT) is one of the most potent toxins known to human kind. The Atomic Force Microscope (AFM) was employed to investigate the conditions under which BoNT type A heavy chain would bind and/or insert into mica supported dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) lipid bilayers. As an alternate technique, DPPC/GT1b or total ganglioside extract (80:20) monolayers of a Langmuir Blodgett (LB) Trough were adapted to be artificial membrane models for toxin insertion studies. We conclude that LB monolayer studies are a promising candidate for BoNT/A membrane insertion investigation. Botulinum neurotoxin serotype A insertions into the LB monolayers in the presence of BoNT/A low affinity ganglioside receptor alone, independent of pH. This thermodynamic evidence indicates that BoNT/A may begin its heavy chain insertion into the cholinergic nerve ending before endocytosis and acidification.
5

Entwicklung eines Laufrad-basierten Maus-Modells zur Untersuchung der Effekte von Botulinum-Neurotoxinen / Development of a running wheel based mouse model to study the effects of botulinum neurotoxins

Reinert, Marie-Christine 23 March 2017 (has links)
No description available.
6

Nanoparticles as a carrier for protein and plasmid DNA vaccines in microneedle-mediated transcutaneous immunization

Kumar, Amit, active 21st century 25 September 2014 (has links)
Skin is the largest immune organ and an ideal site to administer vaccines. However, by nature, skin is not permeable to antigens, which are macromolecules. The major hurdle in skin permeation is the outermost stratum corneum layer. Microneedles have proven feasible to create micron-sized channels in the epidermis of the skin, through which protein and plasmid DNA antigens can penetrate into the viable skin epidermis and dermis. However, the immune responses induced by microneedle-mediated transcutaneous immunization with protein or plasmid DNA alone are generally weak, and a vaccine adjuvant is often required to induce strong immune responses. Data from numerous previous studies have shown that nanoparticles as a vaccine carrier can significantly enhance the immunogenicity of antigens, but the feasibility of utilizing nanoparticles as a vaccine carrier to enhance the immune responses induced by microneedle-mediated transcutaneous immunization has rarely been studied. In this dissertation, using protein antigen (OVA) chemically conjugated onto the surface of solid-lipid nanoparticles and plasmid DNA (pCMV-beta, pVax/opt-BoNT/C-Hc50, and pCI-neo-sOVA) physically coated on the surface of cationic polymeric nanoparticles, we showed that the immune responses induced by microneedle-mediated transcutaneous immunization with protein antigens or plasmid DNA vaccines are significantly enhanced by delivering the proteins and plasmid DNA with nanoparticles. Importantly, microneedle-mediated transcutaneous immunization with proteins or plasmid DNA induces not only systemic immune responses, but also mucosal immune responses. In addition, it is generally believed that microneedles are safe. However, it remained unclear whether the micropores created by microneedles on the skin will also facilitate the permeation of microbes such as bacteria into the skin. In this dissertation, we also designed an unique ex vivo model to evaluate the permeation of live bacteria through mouse skin pretreated with microneedles. The results demonstrated that the risk of potential bacterial infection associated with microneedle treatment is not greater than that associated with a hypodermic needle injection. / text
7

Palmitoylation and Oxidation of the Cysteine Rich Region of SNAP-25 and their Effects on Protein Interactions

Martinez, Derek Luberli 17 July 2007 (has links) (PDF)
Neurons depend upon neurotransmitter release through regulated exocytosis to accomplish the immense processing performed within the central nervous system. The SNARE hypothesis points to a family of proteins that are thought to enable the membrane fusion that leads to exocytosis. The secondary structure of SNAP-25 is unique among SNARE proteins in that it has two alpha helical SNARE motifs and a cysteine rich (C85, C88, C90, C92) membrane interacting region but notransmembrane domain. The cysteines may be modified by palmitoylation or oxidation but the role of these modifications in vivo is not well understood. Our goal is to elucidate possible regulatory roles of SNAP-25 that relate to its unique structure and these reversible modifications. However, the study of SNAP-25 in reconstituted systems is hampered by a lack of readily available palmitoylated SNAP-25. A method for in vitro palmitoylation of SNAP-25 by HIP14, a neuronal acyltransferase, is described along with the application of a biotinylation streptavidin assay to verify palmitoylation. Palmitoylation increases the extent to which SNAP-25 interacts with lipids as observed with an environment sensitive trpytophan fluorescence assay. Palmitoylation also alters the phase transition of DPPC lipids differently than unpalmitoylated SNAP-25.This effect on the membrane may influence fusion events. Oxidation of the cysteine residues may be responsible for the sensitivity of SNAP-25 to reactive oxygen species. Our data suggests that, when oxidized, SNAP-25 does not interact with membranes to the same extent as palmitoylated SNAP-25. This may provide a mechanism for reducing exocytosis during oxidative stress. Also, oxidized SNAP-25 is not susceptible to Botulinum Neurotoxin E. The effects of oxidation and palmitoylation on the protein interactions of SNAP-25 may shed light on its role in the SNARE complex and membrane fusion.
8

Individual Response to Botulinum Toxin Therapy in Movement Disorders: A Time Series Analysis Approach

Leplow, Bernd, Pohl, Johannes, Wöllner, Julia, Weise, David 27 October 2023 (has links)
On a group level, satisfaction with botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT) treatment in neurological indications is high. However, it is well known that a relevant amount of patients may not respond as expected. The aim of this study is to evaluate the BoNT treatment outcome on an individual level using a statistical single-case analysis as an adjunct to traditional group statistics. The course of the daily perceived severity of symptoms across a BoNT cycle was analyzed in 20 cervical dystonia (CD) and 15 hemifacial spasm (HFS) patients. A parametric single-case autoregressive integrated moving average (ARIMA) time series analysis was used to detect individual responsiveness to BoNT treatment. Overall, both CD and HFS patients significantly responded to BoNT treatment with a gradual worsening of symptom intensities towards BoNT reinjection. However, only 8/20 CD patients (40%) and 5/15 HFS patients (33.3%) displayed the expected U-shaped curve of BoNT efficacy across a single treatment cycle. CD (but not HFS) patients who followed the expected outcome course had longer BoNT injection intervals, showed a better match to objective symptom assessments, and were characterized by a stronger certainty to control their somatic symptoms (i.e., internal medical locus of control). In addition to standard evaluation procedures, patients should be identified who do not follow the mean course-of-treatment effect. Thus, the ARIMA single-case time series analysis seems to be an appropriate addition to clinical treatment studies in order to detect individual courses of subjective symptom intensities.
9

Identification et Quantification des Sous-Types de la Neurotoxine Botulique de Type A par Spectrométrie de Masse / Identification and quantification of botulinim neurotoxin A subtypes by mass spectrometry

Morineaux, Valérie 02 July 2015 (has links)
Les toxines botuliques (BoNTs) sont les substances les plus toxiques connues. Elles sont responsables du botulisme, une maladie rare mais le plus souvent mortelle sans prise en charge médicale. Cependant, les applications médicales des BoNTs sont de plus en plus nombreuses du fait de leurs propriétés paralysantes. Leur toxicité par voie inhalée en fait un des 6 principaux agents du risque intentionnel. Les BoNTs, produites par Clostridium botulinum, se répartissent en 7 types sérologiques qui se déclinent en sous-types. Cette biodiversité rend difficile leur identification par les méthodes classiques utilisées pour les toxines protéiques (approches immunologiques). Jusqu’à présent, seule l’analyse génétique permettait de distinguer les différents sous-types entre eux. Dans ce travail a été développée une méthode d’analyse en LC-QqQ-MS/MS en mode MRM pour identifier les différents sous-types de la BoNT/A dans des matrices complexes à partir de peptides communs et spécifiques à ces sous-types. Un traitement d’échantillon par immunocapture sur billes magnétiques couplées à des anticorps anti-peptides a été développé pour isoler la toxine de l’échantillon avant analyse. Des surnageants de culture des sous-types A1 à A3, A5, A7 à A8 ont été utilisés pour valider la méthode. La limite de détection de la méthode est compatible avec les taux de toxine retrouvés habituellement dans les échantillons naturellement contaminés. Cette méthode de spectrométrie de masse a ensuite été utilisée pour quantifier les différents sous-types de la BoNT/A dans une matrice complexe (surnageants de culture de C. botulinum). Une technique de quantification, utilisant un isotope stable de la chaine légère de type A1, ([13C6]K et [13C6]R), a été retenu comme étalon interne. Les différents sous-types de BoNT/A ont été quantifiés dans les surnageants et la quantité de BoNT correspondante à une dose létale minimale de 100% a été déterminée pour chaque sous-type. / Botulinum neurotoxins (BoNTs) are the most poisonous substances known. They are responsible for human botulism, a rare but potentially fatal disease if not quickly treated. However, BoNTs were approved for the treatment of numerous medical applications due to their temporary paralysis effects. BoNTs are among the six agents with the highest risk of potential use as bio-weapons because of their high toxicity in aerosol form. BoNTs, produced by Clostridium botulinum, are divised into seven toxinotypes and each toxinotype contains several subtypes. This biodiversity makes more difficult their identification with classical methods by immunological ways. Until now, only molecular genetical methods could differenciate subtypes among them. The aim of this work was to develop a liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) in MRM mode to efficiently discrimate the distinct subtypes from specific and common peptides. Immunocapture sample preparation with antipeptides antibodies was used and allowed the isolation of the toxin from the sample. Subtyping was performed with crude supernatants (BoNT/A1 to /A3, /A5, /A7 and /A8) in order to validate the method. Limit of detection (LOD) of the proposed method is in the range of minimal toxin concentration found in naturally contamined samples. In a second part of this work, this mass spectrometry method was used to quantify the neurotoxin in complex matrices (supernatants of Clostridium botulinum cultures). Isotope labeled light chain (13C6]K et [13C6]R) from botulinum A1 neurotoxin was produced and used as internal standart. Subtypes were quantified in supernatants and the quantity of neurotoxin for one minimal lethal dose 100% was determined for each subtype
10

Der Einfluß von Botulinumneurotoxin A auf Wachstum und Differenzierung primär dissoziierter hippocampaler Zellkulturen

Fetter, Ingmar 28 June 1999 (has links)
Obwohl die Struktur und das Ausmaß dendritischer Verzweigungen eine wichtige Rolle bei der Informationsübertragung neuronaler Zellen spielen, ist bislang wenig über die Bausteine und Molekularmechanismen des Dendritenwachstums bekannt. Unter der Verwendung primär dissoziierter hippocampaler Zellkulturen embryonaler Mäuse untersuchte ich frühe Stadien des Zellfortsatzwachstums. Dabei konnte ich SNAP-25 (synaptosomal associated protein of 25 kDA), ein Schlüsselprotein der regulierten Exozytose, nicht nur in Axonen und terminalen Axonendigungen, sondern auch anhand von Doppelimmunmarkierungen mit den dendritischen Markern Transferrin-Rezeptor und MAP-2 in Dendriten lokalisieren. Die spezifische Inaktivierung von SNAP-25 durch Botulinumneurotoxin A (BoNT/A) führte zur Hemmung des Axonwachstums und des Vesikelrecyclings in terminalen Axonendigungen. Darüberhinaus wurde auch das Wachstum dendritischer Fortsätze von Körner- und Pyramidenzellen durch BoNT/A signifikant gehemmt. Daraus läßt sich schließen, daß SNAP-25, im Gegensatz zu Synaptobrevin, an konstitutiven Prozessen in den Axonen und Dendriten hippocampaler Neurone beteiligt ist. / Structure and dimension of the dendritic arbor are important determinants of information processing by the nerve cell, but mechanisms and molecules involved in dendritic growth are essentially unknown. I investigated early mechanisms of dendritic growth using mouse fetal hippocampal neurons in primary culture, which form processes during the first week in vitro. I detected a key component of regulated exocytosis, SNAP-25 (synaptosomal associated protein of 25 kDa)., in axons and axonal terminals as well as in dendrites identified by the occurrence of the dendritic markers transferrin receptor and MAP2. Selective inactivation of SNAP-25 by botulinum neurotoxin A (BoNTA) resulted in inhibition of axonal growth and of vesicle recycling in axonal terminals. In addition, dendritic growth of hippocampal pyramidal and granule neurons was significantly inhibited by BoNTA. These observations indicate that SNAP-25, but not synaptobrevin, is involved in constitutive axonal growth and dendrite formation by hippocampal neurons.

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