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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.
81

Systemic sclerosis immunoglobulin induces growth and a pro-fibrotic state in vascular smooth muscle cells through the epidermal growth factor receptor

Arts, Monique 08 1900 (has links)
No description available.
82

The effects of various combinations of different classes of anticancer drugs and tyrosine kinase inhibitors on the human MCF-7 breast carcinoma cell line

Abrahams, Beynon January 2014 (has links)
Magister Scientiae (Medical Bioscience) - MSc(MBS) / This study investigated the effects of TKIs on the growth and proliferation of MCF-7 breast carcinoma cells in culture. MCF-7 cells were exposed to different concentrations of TKIs alone and in combination with each other. Inhibition of cell growth by TKIs used individually occurred in a dose- and time-dependent manner. When EGFR Inhibitor I, EGFR Inhibitor II/BIBX1382 and the multi-specific EGFR/ErbB-2/ErB-4 Inhibitor were used in combination with each other at equimolar log dose concentrations, the combined effects on cell growth was significantly different to inhibitors used individually as reflected in a decreased EC50 (IC50) during combination treatments. Generally, for the combinations with DOX, CPL and the TKIs, synergistic as well as antagonistic effects were observed at isoeffective concentrations with resultant decreases in dose reduction indices (DRIs) implying greater efficacies with the respective combinations. In this study, conventional PCR was used to detect and illustrate the presence of the EGFR gene in the samples, while RT-qPCR was used to determine the mRNA expression levels of this gene in MCF-7 breast carcinoma cells
83

Rôle des signaux pro-survie du récepteur Fas/CD95 dans le cancer colorectal : importance du dialogue moléculaire entre Fas et l’EGFR (Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor) / Dissecting the Fas life-death signaling pathways in colorectal cancer : importance of the Fas-Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) crosstalk

Ta, Ngoc Ly 25 October 2018 (has links)
Le cancer colorectal (CCR) est la troisième maladie maligne la plus fréquente et la deuxième cause de décès par cancer. La famille des récepteurs tyrosine kinases transmembranaires ErbB a été identifiée comme l'un des principaux moteurs du développement et de la progression du CCR et l'un de ses membres les plus connus, le récepteur du facteur de croissance épidermique (EGFR / ERBB1 / Her1), considéré comme l'une des cibles les plus importantes en traitement CRC. Deux autres membres de la famille ErbB, les récepteurs Her2 et Her3, apparaissent également comme de nouvelles cibles importantes pour le CRC en raison de la mutation somatique, de l’amplification génique ou de la résistance aux traitements anti-EGFR. La protéine transmembranaire, Fas (TNFRSF6 / CD95), est un membre de la superfamille des récepteurs du facteur de nécrose tumorale (TNFRSF). Il peut transmettre des signaux multiples qui mènent à des destins de cellules complètement différents. Selon les contextes cellulaires, Fas initie la mort cellulaire par apoptose, essentielle pour arrêter les réponses immunitaires chroniques et prévenir l'auto-immunité et le cancer, ou pour stimuler la survie, la prolifération et la motilité des cellules, ce qui favorise l'auto-immunité, la croissance cancéreuse et les métastases. Avec des preuves de plus en plus nombreuses de la signalisation pro-survie médiée par Fas, les activités de promotion du cancer chez les patients atteints de cancer sont maintenant reconnues comme étant significatives et cliniquement pertinentes. Bien que cette polyvalence de signalisation ait été particulièrement bien démontrée dans le cancer du côlon, les mécanismes moléculaires qui sous-tendent les voies de survie sont encore largement inconnus. Dans ce contexte, l'objectif principal de mon doctorat Le projet visait à étudier l’importance du crosstalks entre les membres de la famille Fas et ErbB et, plus particulièrement, à déterminer si la signalisation Fas pouvait influencer la signalisation de l’EGFR favorisant le cancer.Plus précisément, je décris comment l’état de phosphorylation de la tyrosine Fas influence fortement la signalisation de la voie EGFR dans les cellules colorectales. Mes données démontrent que Fas dans son état prosurvival, phosphorylé à Y291 (pY291-Fas), interagit en effet avec EGFR et que cette interaction intensifie significativement la signalisation de l'EGFR dans les cellules cancéreuses colorectales anti-EGFR via la voie Yes-1 / STAT3. Le pY291-Fas s'accumule dans le noyau lors du traitement par EGF et favorise la localisation nucléaire du phospho-EGFR et du phospho-STAT3, l'expression de la cycline D1, l'activation des voies Akt et MAPK médiées par STAT3 et enfin la prolifération et la migration cellulaires. De plus, je découvre également le rôle potentiel que Her3 pourrait jouer avec Fas dans la libération des cellules cancéreuses colorectales de l'inhibition anti-EGFR.Tous ensemble mon doctorat des études permet de mieux comprendre le rôle des voies de survie de Fas dans la signalisation ErBb dans le CRC. Fait important, en démontrant un lien entre l'émergence d'une résistance aux traitements anti-ErbB et le signal de Fas pro-survie, mon travail justifie le développement d'une thérapie ciblée Fas / phospho-Fas comme nouvelle option thérapeutique pour surmonter les anti-EGFR, chez les patients présentant une résistance anti-EGFR secondaire. / Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common malignant disease and the second most frequent cause of cancer-related death. The ErbB family of transmembrane receptor tyrosine kinases has been identified as a major driver of the development and progression of CRC and one its best-known member, the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR /ERBB1/Her1), considered one of the most important targets in CRC treatment. Two others members of the ErbB family, the receptors Her2 and Her3, also emerge as important new targets for CRC due to the somatic mutation, gene amplification or resistance to the anti-EGFR therapies. The transmembrane protein, Fas (TNFRSF6/CD95), is a member of the tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily (TNFRSF). It can transmit multiple signals that lead to completely different cell fates. Depending on cellular contexts, Fas either initiates cell death by apoptosis, which is essential for shutting down chronic immune responses and preventing autoimmunity and cancer, or stimulates cell survival, proliferation, and motility, which can promote autoimmunity, cancer growth, and metastasis. With increasing evidence of Fas-mediated pro-survival signaling, the cancer-promoting activities of Fas are now recognized as significant and clinically relevant. While this signaling versatility has been particularly well demonstrated in colon cancer, the molecular mechanisms underlying the survivals pathways are still largely unknown. In this context, the main aim of my Ph.D. project was to study the importance of the crosstalks between Fas and the ErbB family members and more specifically to determine whether the Fas signaling could influence the cancer-promoting signaling of EGFR.More precisely, I describe how the Fas tyrosine phosphorylation status strongly influences the signaling of the EGFR pathway in colorectal cells. My data demonstrate that Fas in its prosurvival state, phosphorylated at Y291 (pY291-Fas), indeed interacts with EGFR and that this interaction significantly intensifies EGFR signaling in anti-EGFR-resistant colorectal cancer cells via the Yes-1/STAT3-mediated pathway. The pY291-Fas accumulates in the nucleus upon EGF treatment and promotes the nuclear localization of phospho-EGFR and phospho-STAT3, the expression of cyclin D1, the activation of STAT3-mediated Akt and MAPK pathways, and finally the cell proliferation and migration. Additionally, I also uncover the potential role that Her3, may play along with Fas, in the colorectal cancer cell escape from anti-EGFR inhibition. All together my Ph.D. studies provide a better understanding of the role of the Fas survival pathways in the ErBb signaling in CRC. Importantly, by demonstrating a connection between the emergence of resistance to anti-ErbB therapies and the Fas pro-survival signal, my work provides a rationale for the development of Fas/phospho-Fas targeted therapy as a new therapeutic option for overcoming anti-EGFR, in patients with secondary anti-EGFR resistance.
84

Studium klinických projevů vybraných vzácných onemocnění v dětském věku. / Clinical aspects of selected rare diseases in children.

Mazurová, Stella January 2021 (has links)
Introduction: Diagnosing inborn metabolic diseases, as a large subgroup of rare diseases, due to their rarity and wide variety of clinical manifestations, can be demanding and often prolonged. Objective: The aim of this work is, with the regard to clinical, biochemical and genetical aspects of selected rare diseases, to contribute to their rapid detection, widen the features of the natural course of the disease and contribute to their preventability. Material: This work includes cohort studies of patiens with cardiac manifestations in mitochondrial diseases, namely a group of 48 patients with TMEM70 protein deficiency, a group of 4 patients with Barth syndrome and individual cases of rare mitochondrial cardiomyopathies, thimidine kinase 2 deficiency and alanyl tRNA synthetase 2 deficiency. By determining the frequency, severity and type of heart disease, the phenotype was expanded, and the design of a therapeutic algorithm then made a positive impact on the prognosis of these patients. The work is also focused on the role of cardiac disease in the differential diagnosis of other genetically determined rare diseases, Marfan's syndrome and especially Pompe disease, where the emphasis is on early diagnosis, mainly due to the existence of an effective therapy. Focus on a broader differential diagnosis...
85

Weighted gene co-expression network analysis of colorectal patients to identify right drug-right target for potent efficacy of targeted therapy

Tripathi, Anamika 10 December 2017 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / Colon rectal cancer (CRC) is one of the most common cancers worldwide. It is characterized by the successive accumulation of mutations in genes controlling epithelial cell growth and differentiation leading to genomic in-stability. This results in the activation of proto-oncogene(K-ras), loss of tumor suppressor gene activity and ab-normality in DNA repair genes. Targeted therapy is a new generation of cancer treatment in which drugs attack targets which are specific for the cancer cell and are critical for its survival or for its malignant behavior. Survival of metastatic CRC patients has approximately doubled due to the development of new combinations of stan-dard chemotherapy, and the innovative targeted therapies, such as monoclonal antibodies against epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) or monoclonal antibodies against vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGFR).The study is to exhibit the need for right drug-right target and provides a proof of principle for potent efficacy of molecular targeted therapy for CRC. We have performed the weighted gene co-expression network analysis for three different patient cohort treated with different targeted therapy drugs. The results demonstrates the variation across different treatment regime in context of transcription factor networks. New significant tran-scription factors have been identified as potential biomarker for CRC cancer including EP300, STAT6, ATF3, ELK1, HNF4A, JUN, TAF1, IRF1, TP53, ELF1 and YY1. The results provides guidance for future omic study on CRC and additional validation work for potent biomarker for CRC.

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