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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

TLE proteins in mouse embryonic stem cell self renewal and early lineage specification

Laing, Adam January 2011 (has links)
TLE proteins are a closely related family of vertebrate corepressors. They have no intrinsic DNA binding ability, but are recruited as transcriptional repressors by other sequence specific proteins. TLE proteins and their homologues in other species have been implicated in many developmental processes including neurogenesis, haematopoiesis and the formation of major organs. They have also been implicated in early lineage specification in vertebrates but a direct role in this has not been found in mammals. The aim of my PhD is therefore to analyse the function of TLE proteins in early lineage specification and cell fate decisions using mouse embryonic stem cells (ESCs) as a model. The investigation of this has previously been complicated, firstly by the large array of transcription factors that TLEs interact with and secondly by redundancy between similar TLE proteins hindering loss of function approaches. To circumvent these problems, I have used two complementary experimental strategies. The first was identification of point mutations in TLE1 that affect specific classes of DNA binding. Two of these mutations L743F and R534A were of particular interest and were reversibly overexpressed in ES cells to correlate phenotypes to biochemical activity. The second strategy was the mutation of the two primary TLC genes in ES cells and early mouse embryos, TLE3 and TLE4. Complementary evidence from these approaches revealed a role for TLEs in the promotion of ES cell differentiation by repression of pluripotency/self-renewal associated genes. Additionally, neural specification was increased by TLE1 expression especially by the TLE1 point mutations, highlighting opposing roles for negative effects on mesendodermal differentiation. Early mesoderm/primitive streak was increased by loss of TLE, probably through Wnt antagonism. Anterior endoderm was increased by reduced TLE, but a critical level of TLE was still necessary and TLE1 overexpression also upregulated some anterior endoderm markers suggesting both negative and positive roles for TLE proteins in this process.
2

Dissection moléculaire de la sénescence cellulaire induite par le stress et la thérapie dans le cancer de l’ovaire et son impact sur la réponse des patientes

Calvo Gonzalez, Llilians 09 1900 (has links)
Le cancer de l’ovaire (COv) est le cancer gynécologique le plus létal chez la femme et les traitements existants, chirurgie et chimiothérapie, ont peu évolué au cours des dernières décennies. Nous proposons que la compréhension des différents destins cellulaires tels que la sénescence que peuvent choisir les cellules du cancer de l’ovaire en réponse à la chimiothérapie pourrait conduire à de nouvelles opportunités thérapeutiques. La sénescence cellulaire a été largement associée à l’activité de la protéine TP53, qui est mutée dans plus de 90% des cas de cancer de l’ovaire séreux de haut grade (COv-SHG), la forme la plus commune de la maladie. Dans nos travaux, à partir d’échantillons dérivés de patientes, nous montrons que les cultures primaires du cancer de l’ovaire séreux de haut grade exposées au stress ou à des drogues utilisées en chimiothérapie entrent en senescence grâce à l’activité d’un isoforme du gène CDKN2A (p16INK4A). Dans ces cellules, nous avons évalué les caractéristiques fondamentales de la sénescence cellulaire tels que les altérations morphologiques, l’activité béta galactosidase associée à la sénescence, les dommages à l’ADN, l’arrêt du cycle cellulaire et le phénotype sécrétoire associé à la sénescence. En utilisant des micromatrices tissulaires construites à partir d’échantillons humains de COv-SHG pré- et post-chimiothérapie, accompagnées de leurs données cliniques, nous avons quantifié des marqueurs de sénescence incluant une diminution de la prolifération cellulaire quelques semaines après chimiothérapie. De façon intéressante, l’expression de p16INK4A dans les échantillons de COv-SHG prétraitement corrèle avec une survie prolongée des patientes suite au traitement. Ceci suggère ainsi pour la première fois un impact biologique bénéfique pour la présence de cellules cancéreuses qui sont capable d’activer la sénescence, particulièrement pour le traitement du cancer de l’ovaire. Dans le but de complémenter les thérapies actuelles avec des approches de manipulation pharmacologique de la sénescence, nos résultats suggèrent qu’il serait important de déterminer l’impact positif ou négatif de la sénescence induite par la thérapie sur la progression de la maladie et la survie, pour chaque type de cancer de façon indépendante. / Human ovarian cancer (OvCa) is the deadliest gynecologic malignancy and existing surgical/chemotherapeutic treatment options have been relatively static for decades. We propose that understanding OvCa cell fate decisions taken in response to chemotherapy could guide new therapeutic opportunities. Damage-induced cellular senescence is often associated with TP53 activity, which is heavily mutated in high grade serous (HGS) OvCa (>90%), the most common form of this disease. Here, using patient derived tissues, we show that primary HGS-OvCa cultures predominantly trigger CDKN2A- associated (p16INK4A isoform) senescence following exposure to stress or chemotherapy. Key senescence hallmarks including altered morphology, senescence-associated-Betagalactosidase, DNA damage, cell cycle arrest and the senescence-associated secretory phenotype were evaluated and detected in damaged cells. Using tissue microarrays built from pre- and post-treatment human HGS-OvC tissue samples with accompanying clinical data, we quantified post-treatment hallmarks of senescence including reduced cell proliferation weeks after chemotherapy. Importantly, p16INK4A expression in pretreatment HGS-OvC samples correlated with increased patients survival, suggesting for the first time that senescence-competence in human cancer cells may have a beneficial impact on treatment outcomes for patients. In order to guide the potential improvement of existing human therapies via pharmacological senescence manipulation, our results suggests that it is important to determine for many types of human cancer whether treatment-induced senescence positively or negatively impacts disease progression and patient survival.

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