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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.
51

Immune cell-based strategies for delivering gene therapies in cerebral ischemia and cancer

Dodd, Daniel John 03 July 2023 (has links)
No description available.
52

To What Extent EU Regulations and Consumer Behavior Have Affected the Expansion of Alternative Proteins: A Comparison of the Plant-Based and Cell-Based Meat Markets

Andersson, Josefine, Hannah, Kassidy January 2023 (has links)
Plant-based meat (PBM) fulfills the criteria set by the European Union regulations for the product to be sold in the EU and is currently a highly consumed conventional meat substitute in the region. Whereas, cell-based meat (CBM), as of July 2023, does not fulfill the criteria set by the EU regulations for the product to be legally sold in the EU. This is due to CBM companies not submitting the required Novel Food application to EFSA to recieve market approval. Therefore, CBM is currently not legally sold in the EU and not consumed in the region. This thesis analyzes the impact of EU regulations and consumer behavior, and how these factors affect the growth of the PBM and CBM markets. The restriction of the thesis, the PBM and CBM markets, has been chosen due to them being the primary forms of alternative proteins that are a more sustainable choice to conventional meat. The intention of the thesis is to bring attention to the interplay between law and business, and the implications of their interconnectedness. The thesis is written with the aspiration to answer the question; to what extent have EU regulations and consumer behavior affected the expansion of the plant and cell-based meat markets? To this end, we began with determining if the legal criteria of the regulatory framework applicable to PBM and CBM constitute equal regulatory conditions for the markets to expand in the EU. The regulatory framework referred to in the thesis is restricted to the primary legislations applicable to alternative proteins, which are the Genetically Modified Organisms (GMO) Regulation (EU) No 1829/2003, Novel Food Regulation (EU) 2015/2283, EU Food Law Regulation (EC) No 178/2002, Food Information to Consumers Regulation (EU) No 1169/2011, and EU labeling requirements. We then conducted a collection of previous research on both the PBM and CBM markets restricted to sustainability, retail market, consumer behavior, financial investment, development, and production processes and costs. Thereafter, we compared the previous research and the aforementioned EU regulations to conclude the impacts of the regulations and the differences in the legal application between PBM and CBM. We also conclude how consumer behavior impacts the growth of a market in addition to the regulatory requirements, and showcase their combined effects on the market. The results suggested that compliance with EU regulations determines if the products are authorized to be legally sold in the EU while consumer behavior influences market acceptance and the extent of growth. The key regulatory difference affecting the ability of CBM to comply and experience similar growth to PBM is the Novel Food Regulation, due to it categorizing cell-based products as novel foods. As of May 2023, no companies in the EU have submitted a Novel Food application to EFSA for CBM.
53

3-D cell-based high-throughput screening for drug discovery and cell culture process development

Zhang, Xudong 19 March 2008 (has links)
No description available.
54

Receptores de hormônios da tireóide: estudos computacionais, ressonância plasmônica de superfície e ensaios celulares / Thyroid hormone receptor: computational studies, surface plasmon resonance and cell based assays

Valadares, Napoleão Fonseca 08 December 2008 (has links)
Os receptores dos hormônios da tireóide (TRs) são fatores de transcrição envolvidos na diferenciação celular, metabolismo e funções fisiológicas da maioria dos tecidos. Muitos estudos mostram que diversos efeitos farmacológicos mediados pelos TRs podem ser benéficos na farmacoterapia, especialmente aqueles mediados pelo TR que podem ser úteis em condições médicas importantes como obesidade, hipercolesterolemia e diabetes. Além disso, a descoberta que o TR é a isoforma predominante no coração, mediando a maioria dos efeitos cardiovasculares prejudiciais, estimulou a pesquisa por ligantes seletivos para o TR que poderiam ser utilizados em quadros clínicos importantes com perfil de segurança aceitável. Foi realizado um estudo das relações quantitativas entre a estrutura e atividade (QSAR) de um conjunto de compostos com atividade biológica descrita para TR e TR, que gerou modelos de Holograma QSAR com elevada consistência interna e externa, apresentando bom poder de correlação e predição das propriedades biológicas. Também foi realizado um minucioso estudo de triagem virtual, que propiciou a seleção de 7 compostos que foram adquiridos para terem suas atividades biológicas avaliadas. Ensaios de transfecção e gene repórter foram estabelecidos e utilizados na avaliação da atividade biológica dos compostos selecionados pelo ensaio virtual. Finalmente, um ensaio utilizando ressonância plasmônica de superfície (SPR) foi desenvolvido e utilizado para avaliar a atividade agonista desses compostos, e que pode ser útil para avaliar a atividade de novos ligantes. A técnica de SPR também foi empregada em um cuidadoso estudo da interação do TR com seus correguladores, que incluiu estudos cinéticos e termodinâmicos, propiciando a determinação das taxas cinéticas e parâmetros termodinâmicos para a interação do complexo TR-T3 com peptídeos derivados de dois de seus correguladores. Os resultados obtidos são relevantes e devem ser considerados no planejamento de futuros experimentos utilizando o LBD de TR e agonistas. / The thyroid hormone receptors (TRs) are transcriptional factors involved in cell differentiation, development, metabolism and physiological function of most tissues. Many lines of evidence show that several pharmacological actions of TRs might be beneficial in medical therapy, specially those mediated by TR that target important medical conditions like obesity, hypercholesterolemia and diabetes. Additionally, the findings that TR is the predominant isoform in the heart and mediates most of the TRs deleterious cardiovascular effects, stimulated the research for selective TR ligands which could address important medical needs with an acceptable safety profile. In this PhD thesis, studies of the quantitative structure-activity relationships (QSAR) of a dataset of compounds with reported biologic activity for both TR and TR were performed, and statistically significant Hologram QSAR models with good predictive ability for untested compounds were created. In parallel, a careful virtual screening procedure was executed, leading to the selection of 7 compounds which were purchased for the evaluation of their biological activities. Cell transfection and reporter gene assays were developed, validated and used to evaluate the biological activities of these compounds. Finally, a surface plasmon resonance (SPR) assay was developed and used to assess the agonistic activity of these compounds. The SPR technique was also employed in a careful study of the interaction between the ligand binding domain of TR and peptides derived from its coregulators, which included the determination of the kinetic and thermodynamic parameters for this interaction. The results suggest that flexibility plays an important role in the interaction between the receptor and its coregulators, and point out important aspects of experimental design that should be addressed when using TR LBD and its agonists. Furthermore, the methodology described here may be useful for the identification of new TR ligands.
55

Rapid sample preparation and bioanalytical techniques for efficient screening of organic pollutants in the environment

Nording, Malin January 2006 (has links)
Large numbers of samples often need to be prepared and analysed in surveys of organic pollutants in the environment, but while the methods commonly used in such surveys can provide abundant detail they are generally costly, time-consuming and require large amounts of resources, so there is a need for simpler techniques. The work underlying this thesis assessed the potential utility of more convenient sample preparation and bioanalytical techniques for rapidly screening various environmental matrices that could be useful complements to higher resolution methods. Initially, the utility of a simplified extraction technique followed by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for detecting polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in authentic (i.e. unspiked) contaminated soils was explored. The results showed that there are relationships between the structure and cross-reactivity among compounds that often co-occur with target PAHs. However, their potential contribution to deviations between estimates of total PAH contents of soils obtained using ELISA and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) based reference methods were limited. Instead, the cross-reactivity of target PAHs and the failure to extract all of the PAHs prior to the ELISA determinations were the main reasons for these deviations. Polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins (PCDDs) and polychlorinated dibenzofurans (PCDFs) were detected in food and feed matrices, as well as in authentic contaminated soils using different bioanalytical techniques – ELISA and two cell-based bioassays: CAFLUX and CALUX (chemically activated fluorescent/luciferase gene expression) assays. In addition, enhanced sample preparation techniques based on accelerated solvent extraction (ASE) were developed. ASE with integrated carbon fractionation (ASE-C) in combination with CAFLUX produced estimates of PCDD and PCDF contents in fish oil and fish meal that agreed well with results obtained using reference methods. Furthermore, results from ELISA and GC-high resolution MS analyses of extracts of PCDD- and PCDF-contaminated soil samples obtained using an adjusted ASE-C technique were strongly correlated. Finally, the thesis reports the first experiments in which the results of CAFLUX, CALUX, and ELISA determinations of PCDDs and PCDFs in extracts of authentic contaminated soil samples were evaluated and compared to those obtained using a reference method. All of the bioanalytical techniques were found to be sufficiently sensitive, selective, and accurate for use in screening in compliance with soil quality assessment criteria. Overall, the improved sample preparation and bioanalytical techniques examined proved to be useful potential complements to conventional methods, enhancing the analytical framework for PAHs, PCDDs, and PCDFs. However, further validation has to be undertaken before they are applied on a large-scale.
56

Establishment of a novel technique to study G protein-coupled receptor activation / Entwicklung einer neuen Technik zur Analyse der Aktivierung G-Protein-gekoppelter Rezeptoren

Djannatian, Minou Susan 17 August 2011 (has links)
No description available.
57

A cell-based NRG1-ERBB4 assay designed for high-throughput compound screening to identify small molecule modulators with relevance for schizophrenia / Entwicklung eines zellbasierten Hochdurchsatzverfahrens zur Identifikation Schizophrenie-relevanter Wirkstoffe und Modulatoren des NRG1-ERBB4 Signalweges.

Hinrichs, Wilko 02 November 2012 (has links)
No description available.
58

Characterization of bone marrow stromal clonal populations derived from osteoarthritis patients

Mareddy, Shobha R. January 2008 (has links)
This work is concerned with the characterization of mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) specifically from bone marrow samples derived from patients with osteoarthritis (OA). The multilineage potential of mesenchymal stem cells as well as their ease of exvivo expansion makes these cells an attractive therapeutic tool for applications such as autologous transplantation and tissue engineering. Bone marrow is considered a source of MSC. However, there is a general assumption that the occurrence of MSCs and their activity in bone marrow diminishes with age and disease. This prompted us to isolate and identify multipotential and self-renewing cells from patients with the degenerative disease osteoarthritis, with the view of using these cells for autologous cell therapies. It is therefore of great potential benefit to investigate the isolation and characterization of stem cell/progenitors from bone marrow samples of patients with osteoarthritis in greater detail. We employed a single cell clone culture method in order to develop clonal cell populations from three bone marrow samples and characterized them based on their proliferation and differentiation capabilities. The clonal populations were grouped into fast-growing and slow-growing clones based on their proliferation rates. The fastgrowing clones displayed 20-30% greater proliferation rate than the slow-growing clones. The study also revealed that the proliferation rates were directly proportional to their differentiation capacities. Most of the fast-growing clones were found to be tripotential for osteogenic, chondrogenic and adipogenic lineages, whereas the slow growing clones were either uni or bipotential. Flow cytometry analysis for the phenotype determination using putative MSC surface markers did not reveal any difference between the two clonal populations indicating a need for further molecular studies. Two approaches were employed to further investigate the molecular processes involved in the existence of such varying populations. In the first method gene expression studies were performed between the fast-growing (n=3) and slow-growing (n=3) clonal populations to identify potential genetic markers associated with cell 'sternness' using the Stem Cell RT2 ProfilerTM PCR Array comprising a series of 84 genes related to stem cell pathways. Ten genes were identified to be commonly and significantly over represented in the fast-growing stem cell clones when compared to slow-growing clones. This included expression of transcripts beyond MSC lineage specification such as SOX2, NOTCH1 and FOXA2 which signified that stem cell maintenance requires a coordinated regulation by multiple signalling pathways. The second study involved an extensive protein expression profiling of the fast growing (n=2) and slow growing (n=2) clonal populations using off-line Two Dimensional Liquid Chromatography (2D-LC)/Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption/Ionization (MALDI) Mass Spectrometry (MS). A total of 67 proteins were identified, of which 11 were expressed at significantly different levels between the subpopulations. Protein ontology revealed these proteins to be associated with cellular organization, cytokinesis, signal transduction, energy pathways and cell stress response. Of particular interest was the differential presentation of the proteins calmodulin, tropomyosin and caldesmon between fast- and slow-growing clones. Based on their reported roles in the regulation of cell proliferation and maintenance of cell integrity, we draw an association between their expression and the altered status in which the subpopulations exist. Based on our observations, these proteins may be prospective molecular markers to distinguish between the fast-growing and slow-growing subpopulations. In summary, this study demonstrated the existence of potential stem cells of therapeutic importance in spite of a supposedly smaller stem cell compartment in patients with osteoarthritis. Furthermore, the differentially expressed genes between the sub-populations highlight the 'sternness' of the potential clones, an observation supported by the expression of proteins which act as effective modulators in the maintenance of cell integrity and cell cycle regulation. This study provides a basis for more detailed investigations in search of selective cell surface markers
59

Receptores de hormônios da tireóide: estudos computacionais, ressonância plasmônica de superfície e ensaios celulares / Thyroid hormone receptor: computational studies, surface plasmon resonance and cell based assays

Napoleão Fonseca Valadares 08 December 2008 (has links)
Os receptores dos hormônios da tireóide (TRs) são fatores de transcrição envolvidos na diferenciação celular, metabolismo e funções fisiológicas da maioria dos tecidos. Muitos estudos mostram que diversos efeitos farmacológicos mediados pelos TRs podem ser benéficos na farmacoterapia, especialmente aqueles mediados pelo TR que podem ser úteis em condições médicas importantes como obesidade, hipercolesterolemia e diabetes. Além disso, a descoberta que o TR é a isoforma predominante no coração, mediando a maioria dos efeitos cardiovasculares prejudiciais, estimulou a pesquisa por ligantes seletivos para o TR que poderiam ser utilizados em quadros clínicos importantes com perfil de segurança aceitável. Foi realizado um estudo das relações quantitativas entre a estrutura e atividade (QSAR) de um conjunto de compostos com atividade biológica descrita para TR e TR, que gerou modelos de Holograma QSAR com elevada consistência interna e externa, apresentando bom poder de correlação e predição das propriedades biológicas. Também foi realizado um minucioso estudo de triagem virtual, que propiciou a seleção de 7 compostos que foram adquiridos para terem suas atividades biológicas avaliadas. Ensaios de transfecção e gene repórter foram estabelecidos e utilizados na avaliação da atividade biológica dos compostos selecionados pelo ensaio virtual. Finalmente, um ensaio utilizando ressonância plasmônica de superfície (SPR) foi desenvolvido e utilizado para avaliar a atividade agonista desses compostos, e que pode ser útil para avaliar a atividade de novos ligantes. A técnica de SPR também foi empregada em um cuidadoso estudo da interação do TR com seus correguladores, que incluiu estudos cinéticos e termodinâmicos, propiciando a determinação das taxas cinéticas e parâmetros termodinâmicos para a interação do complexo TR-T3 com peptídeos derivados de dois de seus correguladores. Os resultados obtidos são relevantes e devem ser considerados no planejamento de futuros experimentos utilizando o LBD de TR e agonistas. / The thyroid hormone receptors (TRs) are transcriptional factors involved in cell differentiation, development, metabolism and physiological function of most tissues. Many lines of evidence show that several pharmacological actions of TRs might be beneficial in medical therapy, specially those mediated by TR that target important medical conditions like obesity, hypercholesterolemia and diabetes. Additionally, the findings that TR is the predominant isoform in the heart and mediates most of the TRs deleterious cardiovascular effects, stimulated the research for selective TR ligands which could address important medical needs with an acceptable safety profile. In this PhD thesis, studies of the quantitative structure-activity relationships (QSAR) of a dataset of compounds with reported biologic activity for both TR and TR were performed, and statistically significant Hologram QSAR models with good predictive ability for untested compounds were created. In parallel, a careful virtual screening procedure was executed, leading to the selection of 7 compounds which were purchased for the evaluation of their biological activities. Cell transfection and reporter gene assays were developed, validated and used to evaluate the biological activities of these compounds. Finally, a surface plasmon resonance (SPR) assay was developed and used to assess the agonistic activity of these compounds. The SPR technique was also employed in a careful study of the interaction between the ligand binding domain of TR and peptides derived from its coregulators, which included the determination of the kinetic and thermodynamic parameters for this interaction. The results suggest that flexibility plays an important role in the interaction between the receptor and its coregulators, and point out important aspects of experimental design that should be addressed when using TR LBD and its agonists. Furthermore, the methodology described here may be useful for the identification of new TR ligands.
60

Non-human primate iPS cells for cell replacement therapies and human cardiovascular disease modeling

Rodriguez Polo, Ignacio 29 October 2019 (has links)
No description available.

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