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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.
171

Caractérisation de mécanismes mis en jeu lors des étapes précoces de l'assemblage des lipoviroparticules du virus de l'hépatite C / Characterization of mechanisms involved in the early steps of the Hepatitis C Virus lipoviral particles morphogenesis

Boyer, Audrey 23 September 2015 (has links)
Lors d’une infection chronique, le virus de l'hépatite C (HCV) circule sous forme de lipoviroparticule (LVP) : particules hybrides associant des composants viraux (ARN, les protéines structurelles) et des composants cellulaires (apolipoprotéines, cholestérol). Au cours de ma thèse, nous nous sommes intéressés à identifier la plateforme d'assemblage du HCV, et le rôle du rassemblement des protéines virales par NS2 dans sa formation. Nous avons montré que des interactions de natures différentes sur la membrane du RE sont impliquées dans cette association protéique. Nos résultats suggèrent que des interactions complexes (directes ou via des « membranes résistantes aux détergents » (DRM)) entre les protéines complexées par NS2, peuvent immédiatement précéder la formation LVP. Nous avons également démontré que l’hétérodimère E1E2, les apolipoprotéines B et E (ApoB, ApoE) s’associent en un complexe de protéines dans le réticulum endoplasmique (RE) lorsqu'elles sont exprimées ensembles. Ce complexe se forme au début de l'assemblage du HCV, quelle que soit l'expression des autres protéines virales, et est conservée sur les LVP sécrétées. Basé sur ces données, nous avons proposé un mécanisme expliquant l’initiation de la morphogenèse des LVP. Ensuite, nous avons évalué l'importance de l'association E1E2/ApoE pour le cycle de vie du virus. Nous avons initié une étude pour identifier les acides aminés E1E2 impliqués dans l'interaction avec les apolipoprotéines. Avec ces données, nous souhaitons proposer une meilleure compréhension des mécanismes de la morphogenèse du HCV. / In chronic infection, the hepatitis C virus (HCV) circulates as lipoviral particles (LVP): hybrid particles associating viral (RNA, structural proteins) and cellular components (apolipoproteins, cholesterol). During my PhD, we were interested in identifying the HCV assembly platform, and the role of the association of the viral proteins by NS2 during its formation. We showed that different natures of interactions on the ER membrane are involved in this proteic association. Our results suggest that a complex interplay between proteins of the complex formed by NS2, directly or through “detergent resistant membranes” (DRMs) may be immediately followed by LVPs formation. We also demonstrated that E1E2 heterodimer, apolipoproteins B and E (ApoB, ApoE) associate as a protein complex in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) when expressed together. This complex is formed early in HCV assembly, regardless the expression of other viral proteins, and is conserved on the secreted LVPs. Based on these data, we proposed a mechanism explaining LVP morphogenesis initiation. Then we assessed the importance of E1E2/ApoE association for viral life cycle. We initiate a study to identify the E1E2 amino acids involved in the interaction with apolipoproteins. With these data, we wished to provide a better understanding of the mechanisms of the HCV morphogenesis.
172

Development of a hepatitis C virus knowledgebase with computational prediction of functional hypothesis of therapeutic relevance

Samuel, Kojo Kwofie January 2011 (has links)
Philosophiae Doctor - PhD / To ameliorate Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) therapeutic and diagnostic challenges requires robust intervention strategies, including approaches that leverage the plethora of rich data published in biomedical literature to gain greater understanding of HCV pathobiological mechanisms. The multitudes of metadata originating from HCV clinical trials as well as low and high-throughput experiments embedded in text corpora can be mined as data sources for the implementation of HCV-specific resources. HCV-customized resources may support the generation of worthy and testable hypothesis and reveal potential research clues to augment the pursuit of efficient diagnostic biomarkers and therapeutic targets. This research thesis report the development of two freely available HCV-specific web-based resources: (i) Dragon Exploratory System on Hepatitis C Virus (DESHCV) accessible via http://apps.sanbi.ac.za/DESHCV/ or http://cbrc.kaust.edu.sa/deshcv/ and(ii) Hepatitis C Virus Protein Interaction Database (HCVpro) accessible via http://apps.sanbi.ac.za/hcvpro/ or http://cbrc.kaust.edu.sa/hcvpro/.DESHCV is a text mining system implemented using named concept recognition and cooccurrence based approaches to computationally analyze about 32, 000 HCV related abstracts obtained from PubMed. As part of DESHCV development, the pre-constructed dictionaries of the Dragon Exploratory System (DES) were enriched with HCV biomedical concepts, including HCV proteins, name variants and symbols to enable HCV knowledge specific exploration. The DESHCV query inputs consist of user-defined keywords, phrases and concepts. DESHCV is therefore an information extraction tool that enables users to computationally generate association between concepts and support the prediction of potential hypothesis with diagnostic and therapeutic relevance.Additionally, users can retrieve a list of abstracts containing tagged concepts that can be used to overcome the herculean task of manual biocuration. DESHCV has been used to simulate previously reported thalidomide-chronic hepatitis C hypothesis and also to model a potentially novel thalidomide-amantadine hypothesis.HCVpro is a relational knowledgebase dedicated to housing experimentally detected HCV-HCV and HCV-human protein interaction information obtained from other databases and curated from biomedical journal articles. Additionally, the database contains consolidated biological information consisting of hepatocellular carcinoma(HCC) related genes, comprehensive reviews on HCV biology and drug development,functional genomics and molecular biology data, and cross-referenced links to canonical pathways and other essential biomedical databases. Users can retrieve enriched information including interaction metadata from HCVpro by using protein identifiers,gene chromosomal locations, experiment types used in detecting the interactions, PubMed IDs of journal articles reporting the interactions, annotated protein interaction IDs from external databases, and via “string searches”. The utility of HCVpro has been demonstrated by harnessing integrated data to suggest putative baseline clues that seem to support current diagnostic exploratory efforts directed towards vimentin. Furthermore,eight genes comprising of ACLY, AZGP1, DDX3X, FGG, H19, SIAH1, SERPING1 and THBS1 have been recommended for possible investigation to evaluate their diagnostic potential. The data archived in HCVpro can be utilized to support protein-protein interaction network-based candidate HCC gene prioritization for possible validation by experimental biologists.
173

Role Of RNA-Protein Interactions In The Internal Initiation Of Translation Of Plus-Strand RNA Viruses : A Novel Target For Antiviral Therapeutics

Ray, Partho Sarothi 07 1900 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
174

Hepatitis C virus-induced reprogramming of glutamine metabolism / Reprogrammation du métabolisme de la glutamine par le virus de l'hépatite C

Lévy, Pierre 18 December 2014 (has links)
L'hépatite C chronique est une des étiologies principales du carcinome hépatocellulaire. En revanche, les mécanismes de tumorigenèse sont peu connus. Récemment, plusieurs modifications du métabolisme du glucose ont été décrites dans les cellules infectées par le HCV. Celles-ci évoquent les reprogrammations métaboliques mises en place dans les cellules cancéreuses. L'effet Warburg, ou glycolyse aérobie, est une des caractéristiques principales des cellules tumorales. Ce phénomène permet d'assurer une production énergétique ainsi qu'un stock en précurseurs de macromolécules suffisants pour permettre la prolifération. Par ailleurs, en complément de l'utilisation de glucose, les cellules tumorales deviennent dépendantes de la métabolisation de la glutamine pour alimenter leur métabolisme énergétique et les différentes voies de biosynthèse. Mes travaux de thèse ont porté sur l'étude des changements métaboliques caractéristiques des cellules cancéreuses, et plus précisément sur le métabolisme de la glutamine, dans les cellules infectées par le HCV. Dans le modèle de culture cellulaire HCVcc, une activation de l'utilisation de la glutamine par le virus a pu être mise en évidence. L'infection par HCV entraine une augmentation du facteur de transcription MYC, de plusieurs transporteurs de glutamine ainsi que de la glutaminase, l'enzyme limitante de la glutaminolyse. De façon intéressante, ces changements semblent survenir également chez les personnes chroniquement infectés par le virus, comme le suggère l'analyse des biopsies de patients. Ces altérations métaboliques pourraient participer à la mise en place d'un environnement favorable au développement tumoral / Chronic infection with hepatitis C virus (HCV) is one of the main etiologies of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). However, mechanisms of HCV-related tumorigenesis are ill-defined. Recent literature data suggest that HCV infection may reprogram glucose metabolism in a cancerlike fashion. The Warburg effect, or aerobic glycolysis, is a hallmark of cancer. Activation of this pathway allows tumor cells to sustain high rates of energy production and provide sufficient biosynthetic precursors for proliferation. Likewise, the induction of similar metabolic alterations may favor HCV multiplication through the rapid production of nucleotides, amino acids and lipids. To complement aerobic glycolysis, tumor cells become frequently dependent on glutamine. The partial oxidation of glutamine through the glutaminolytic pathway can fuel their energy metabolism and several anabolic pathways. However, the role of glutamine metabolism in HCV life cycle has not been documented so far. I focused my PhD research project on the characterization of metabolic alterations triggered by HCV. In particular, I evaluated the occurrence of distinctive features of tumor cell metabolism in HCVinfected cells, with a specific attention on glutamine utilization. In the HCVcc cell culture model, I report the induction of a metabolic reprogramming towards higher rates of glutaminolysis upon HCV infection. HCV-induced transcriptional activation of MYC, along with several glutamine transporters and glutaminase, is likely to be responsible for this metabolic shift. Interestingly, increases in transcript levels of these factors in liver biopsies of patients with chronic hepatitis C suggest that this metabolic reprogramming may be relevant in vivo. Moreover, these metabolic changes may expose new drug targets against HCV as suggested by the inhibition of the virus replication upon suppression of glutaminolysis via different strategies. Altogether, these findings uncover a potential link between chronic hepatitis C and HCC through the installation of a favorable metabolic environment for tumor development
175

Développement méthodologique en résonance plasmonique de surface et ses applications à l’étude de mécanismes régulateurs viraux / Methodological development in surface plasmon resonance and applications to the study of virological regulatory mechanisms

Palau, William 10 July 2015 (has links)
Le but de notre travail était d'étudier comment des interactions impliquant des acides nucléiques pouvaient réguler le cycle viral du virus de l'hépatite C (VHC). L'ARN génomique du VHC est très structuré au niveau de ses extrémités 5' et 3'. La tige-boucle 5BSL3.2 a été décrite comme interagissant avec la SLIIId, la Seq9110 et la SL2 par génétique inverse et expériences de complémentation de mutations. La résonance plasmonique de surface (SPR) a été utilisée afin de caractériser ces interactions. Cela nous a conduit à développer des méthodes permettant d’étendre l'utilisation de la SPR. Nous avons pu observer, in vitro, une interaction entre la 5BSL3.2 et miR-122, un microARN fortement exprimé dans les hépatocytes. Nos résultats ont également montré que la SL2 était une séquence ARN pouvant former au moins deux conformations. L'une étant capable d'interagir avec la 5BSL3.2 et l'autre pouvant s'auto-associer. L'étude de cette dimérisation sur modèle cellulaire a montré qu'elle était impliquée dans les mécanismes de la réplication virale. Le développement d'une méthode d'analyse des complexes ternaires a permis la caractérisation simultanée du complexe formé entre la boucle interne de la 5BSL3.2 et ses partenaires (Seq9110 et SLIIId) ainsi que du complexe formé entre la boucle apicale et ses partenaires (SL2 et miR-122). Ces résultats ont montré que les deux sites de liaison de la 5BSL3.2 étaient structurellement indépendants. Ces interactions pourraient donc coexister dans un contexte physiologique. Les résultats montrent que la SLIIId et la Seq9110 sont en compétition pour interagir avec la boucle interne de la 5BSL3.2 tandis que la tige-boucle SL2 et miR-122 sont en compétition pour interagir avec la boucle apicale de la 5BSL3.2. La 5BSL3.2 est donc un motif ARN structuré pouvant agir comme une plaque tournante, capable d'interagir avec d'autres régions de l'ARN génomique tandis que la SL2 a montré que les deux interactions qu'elle pouvait former, mutuellement exclusives, étaient importantes pour la prolifération virale. Les mécanismes de compétition observés pourraient être impliqués dans la commutation entre les différentes étapes du cycle viral. / We are interested in understanding how interactions involving nucleic acids regulate the life cycle of the Hepatitis C virus (HCV). The HCV genomic RNA is highly structured at the 5' and 3' ends. The stem-loop 5BSL3.2 was described to interact with the SLIIId, the Seq9110 and the SL2 by reverse genetics and complementation mutation experiments. Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) was used to characterize these interactions. This led us to develop methods to expand the use of this technique. We described in vitro evidences for an interaction between 5BSL3.2 and miR-122, a microRNA highly expressed in hepatocytes. As shown by our results, SL2 is a highly dynamic RNA motif that fluctuates between at least two conformations: one is able to hybridize with 5BSL3.2 and the other one is capable of self-associating. The study of this dimerization in living cells has shown an implication of this phenomenon in viral replication processes. The development of a ternary complex analysis method allowed the characterization of the Seq9110 (or SLIIId) and SL2 (or miR-122) interacting with 5BSL3.2. Our results shown that the two binding sites of 5BSL3.2, the apical and internal loops, are structurally independent, suggesting that these interactions may coexist in a physiological context. SLIIId and Seq9110 were shown to compete to interact with 5BSL3.2 internal loop while SL2 and miR-122 were shown to compete to interact with 5BSL3.2 apical loop. In conclusion, 5BSL3.2 is a structured RNA motif that could act as a molecular hub capable of interacting with other genomic RNA regions while the two interactions of the SL2, mutually exclusives, were shown to be crucial for viral proliferation. The competition mechanisms observed could be involved in the commutation between viral cycle steps.
176

Développement d'une nouvelle famille d'inhibiteurs de cyclophilines à large spectre antiviral et étude de leurs mécanismes d'action dans les infections par le Virus de l'Hépatite C et les Coronavirus. / Development of a new family of cyclophilin inhibitors with broad antiviral spectrum and study of their mechanisms of action in Hepatitis C Virus and Coronavirus infections.

Nevers, Quentin 31 January 2018 (has links)
Les dernières décennies ont été marquées par l’émergence ou la réémergence d’un nombre croissant de virus pathogènes. Malheureusement, les antiviraux actuellement sur le marché ciblent un nombre restreint de virus ; il y a donc un besoin urgent de développer des antiviraux à large spectre. Les cyclophilines sont des protéines cellulaires impliquées dans un grand nombre de processus biologiques, qui possèdent une activité enzymatique peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomérase (PPIase). Elles sont également impliquées dans la réplication de virus appartenant à des familles éloignées et constituent donc une cible de choix pour le développement d'antiviraux à large spectre. Toutefois, les inhibiteurs de cyclophilines disponibles possèdent de nombreux inconvénients qui rendent leur utilisation clinique difficile.Par une stratégie de "fragment-based drug design", nous avons généré une nouvelle famille d'inhibiteurs de cyclophilines, les SMCypI ("Small-Molecule Cyclophilin Inhibitors"), complètement différents de tous les inhibiteurs de cyclophilines existants. La cristallographie de ces composés a montré qu'ils se fixaient dans les deux poches voisines du site actif des cyclophilines et qu'ils inhibaient leur activité PPIase. Ces composés n’étaient pas immunosuppressifs et bloquaient in vitro l'infection par le VIH, le VHC et les Coronavirus.L'activité anti-VHC du C31, composé le plus actif sur l'activité PPIase des cyclophilines, a été caractérisée. Le C31 était un inhibiteur pan-génotypique du VHC, doté d’une haute barrière contre la résistance et présentant une activité additive avec les inhibiteurs du VHC approuvés. Nous avons montré que le C31 bloquait l'infection par le VHC en rompant l'interaction entre la protéine virale NS5A et la cyclophiline A de façon PPIase-dépendante. Enfin, le C31 était actif sur la réplication des virus zika, de la dengue, de la fièvre jaune et du Nil Occidental.L'activité des SMCypI a été caractérisée sur l'infection par le Coronavirus 229E. De manière intéressante, l’inhibition de l’activité PPIase était nécessaire, mais pas suffisante pour l’activité antivirale. Une étude de la relation structure-activité des composés a révélé qu'un groupement chimique situé à l'interface entre les deux poches du site actif des cyclophilines jouait un rôle clé dans l'effet anti-coronavirus. Le F836 a été identifié comme le composé le plus actif, qui bloquait l'effet cytopathique et la quantité d'ARN du HCoV-229E avec la même efficacité que l'alisporivir, sans toxicité associée. Ce composé bloquait l'entrée du HCoV-229E après l'attachement du virus à la surface cellulaire, et était également actif sur l'entrée des HCoV-OC43 et du MERS-CoV. Nous avons par la suite démontré l’association de la cyclophiline A avec les particules virales. Par l'utilisation de la technologie CRISPR-Cas9, des cellules invalidées pour la cyclophiline A ont été générées. La cyclophiline A apparaissait nécessaire pour l'infection par HCoV-229E et la cible de l'effet antiviral du F836.Les SMCypI constituent un outil pour la compréhension des mécanismes par lesquels les cyclophilines modulent les infections virales et représentent des candidats crédibles pour le développement futur d'antiviraux à large spectre. / Over the past decades, an increasing number of viruses has emerged or re-emerged in humans. Unfortunately, currently approved antiviral drugs target a small set of viruses. Thus, there is an urgent need for the development of broad-spectrum antiviral drugs.Cyclophilins are cellular proteins involved in a large number of biological processes, and in different viral lifecycles from unrelated families. They appear as a potential target for the development of broad-spectrum antiviral approaches. However, currently available cyclophilin inhibitors have drawbacks which limit their clinical use.By means of "fragment-based drug design", we generated a new class of small-molecule cyclophilin inhibitors (SMCypI), unrelated with those already available. Cristallographic studies revealed that the SMCypIs bind to two close pockets of the active site and inhibit cyclophilin PPIase activity. These compounds do not bear immunosuppressive properties and inhibit the replication of HIV, HCV and coronaviruses in vitro.We characterized the anti-HCV activity of C31, the most potent inhibitor of cyclophilin PPIase activity. C31 had pan-genotypic HCV inhibitor properties, with a high barrier to resistance and additive effects with currently approved anti-HCV agents. C31 blocked HCV replication by disrupting the interaction between the nonstructural viral protein NS5A and cyclophilin A in a PPIase-dependent manner. Finally, C31 was active on zika, yellow fever, dengue and West-Nile virus infections.The antiviral activity of the SMCypIs has then been characterized on HCoV-229E infection. Interestingly, PPIase inhibition was necessary, but not sufficient for antiviral effect. A structure-activity relationship study identified a key moiety in the SMCypIs at the interface between the two cyclophilin pockets. F836 has been identified as the most potent compound which inhibited both the cytopathic effect and the intracellular RNA of HCoV-229E without associated cytotoxicity and as potently as alisporivir. This compound targeted HCoV-229E entry at a post-attachment step and was also active on HCoV-OC43 and MERS-CoV strains. We then demonstrated that cyclophilin A was associated with viral particles. By means of CRISPR-Cas9, cell lines depleted for cyclophilin A were generated. Cyclophilin A was identified as a proviral factor for HCoV-229E and was partially involved in F836 antiviral effect. Cyclophilin A expression level was drastically decreased by infection.SMCypIs represent a unique tool to decipher the cellular and molecular mechanisms by which cyclophilins interfere with viral lifecycles, as well as drugable compounds that could find an indication as broad-spectrum antiviral drugs.
177

Les cyclopropanes monofluorés : nouvelle architecture pour la conception de peptidomimétiques / Fluorinated cyclopropanes : a new scaffold for the conception of peptidomimetics

Milanole, Gaëlle 08 November 2013 (has links)
L’intérêt des composés organiques fluorés est de nos jours de plus en plus important en raison de leur large domaine d’application (agrochimie, nucléaire, matériaux, chimie médicinale…). Par exemple, en chimie médicinale, la présence d’un ou plusieurs atomes de fluor au sein de biomolécules conduit très souvent à une amélioration de leur profil thérapeutique. Par ailleurs, le cyclopropane, le plus petit et le plus tendu des cycloalcanes, permet également de modifier les caractéristiques pharmacologiques de composés biologiques de par sa géométrie inhabituelle. En effet, la rigidification structurale apportée par ce motif influe sur la biodisponibilité d’une biomolécule en améliorant sa sélectivité et son affinité pour un récepteur biologique. Dans ce contexte, nous avons choisi d’associer les propriétés remarquables de l’atome de fluor à la contrainte structurale du cyclopropane dans le but d’élaborer deux nouvelles classes de fluoropeptidomimétiques.Tout d’abord, nous nous sommes intéressés à la modification de la chaîne latérale d’acides aminés naturels en développant la synthèse des analogues cyclopropaniques fluorés de la méthionine, de la leucine, de la lysine et de l’arginine. Nous avons ensuite appliqué l’un de nos acides aminés cyclopropaniques fluorés à la synthèse totale de l’analogue fluoré d’un inhibiteur de la sérineprotéase NS3/4A, le TMC 435.Enfin, dans le but de proposer une voie de synthèse générale permettant l’accès aux pseudopeptides fluorés comportant un monofluorocyclopropane à la place du lien peptidique, nous avons développé une nouvelle stratégie basée sur une étape d‘addition nucléophile de réactifs organométalliques sur des N-(tert-butanesulfinyl)-α-fluoroimines chirales. / Fluoroorganic compounds are increasingly popular owing to their wide range of applications. For instance, in the field of medicinal chemistry, fluorinated molecules often lead to an improvement of the therapeutic profile compared to non-fluorinated derivatives. Besides, with its unique bonding properties, the cyclopropane ring provides unusual physical and pharmacological properties to structures that incorporate it. Indeed, the structural constraint provided by the cyclopropane ring clearly alters the selectivity and the affinity for a binding site. In this context, we decided to combine the cyclopropane and the fluorine atom to develop two new classes of peptidomimetics. First, we focused on the modification of the side chain of natural aminoacids (methionine, leucine,lysine and arginine) and the synthesis of fluorinated cyclopropyl analogues was achieved. Then, we applied our strategy to the synthesis of the fluorinated analogue of the TMC 435, a NS3/4A serine protease inhibitor involved in the replication cycle of Hepatitis C virus. Finally, in our project aiming at proposing a general method to access pseudopeptides featuring a fluorinated cyclopropane moiety as the peptide bond isostere, we develop a new strategy based on the nucleophilic addition of organometallic reagents to N-(tert-butanesulfinyl)-α-fluoroimines. This methodology allows us to control the asymmetric center on the N-terminal side of the peptide.
178

Understanding Immune Suppression in Patients with Chronic Hepatitis C Virus Infections

Okwor, Chisom Ifeoma Adaeze 02 March 2021 (has links)
Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) is a small RNA virus that progresses to chronicity in 50-80% of infected individuals. Direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) are revolutionary treatments for HCV with 90-98% cure rates. However, over time, chronic HCV infections can result in advanced liver disease, including cirrhosis. Patients with advanced fibrosis experience a poor response to vaccination, recurrent infections and increased risk for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). These outcomes are, in part, a consequence of immune dysfunction. Increased inhibitory receptor and Galectin-9 (GAL-9) expression is a possible mechanism promoting lymphocyte dysfunction. In this study, blood samples were collected from chronic HCV patients with different degrees of liver fibrosis. I conducted a 13-parameter flow stain on the peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of these patients. Next, I measured the expression of inhibitory receptors (PD-1, CTLA-4, LAG-3, TIGIT and TIM-3) and GAL-9 on bulk T cell and NK cells of 15 chronic HCV patients with no to moderate fibrosis (F0-F2) and 15 with advanced fibrosis (F3-F4). To analyze receptor co-expression, I employed t-distributed stochastic neighbor embedding (t-SNE) analysis to dimensionally reduce the multi-parametric data. Notably, I found that F3-F4 patients had higher frequencies of >3 inhibitory receptor co-expression on NK cells. Moreover, t-SNE analysis of bulk T cells revealed that F3-F4 patients manifest a higher frequency of cells in the clusters with CD25+TIGITmed-hi CD4+ T cells and PD-1medLAG-3med-hiGAL-9med-hi CD4+ T cells. t-SNE analysis of NK cells also showed that F3-F4 patients manifest a higher frequency of cells in the cluster with CD25+TIGITmed-hiTIM-3med-hi CD56Dim NK cells and CCR7+ PD-1medLAG-3med-hiGAL-9med-hi CD56Dim NK cells. Lastly, the frequency of cells in these clusters was found to positively correlate with patient’s extent of liver damage. In conclusion, I identified phenotypes of immune dysregulation that could explain the increased susceptibility to infection and HCC in chronic HCV patients with advanced fibrosis. These phenotypes could identify targets for combinatorial checkpoint blockade therapy to potentially improve immune function in these patients.
179

Screening for hepatitis C virus among adolescents and emerging adults in federally qualified health centers in the United States, 2012–2017

Epstein, Rachel Lee 29 September 2019 (has links)
INTRODUCTION: Despite rising hepatitis C virus (HCV) incidence in the United States in recent years among young adults, little data describe HCV testing in youth. My objective was to characterize the HCV care cascade in adolescents and emerging adults in a large US sample and to describe the association between diagnosed substance use disorders (SUDs) and HCV testing. METHODS: In this retrospective cohort study, I describe HCV care cascade outcomes for youth 13–21 years old seen at least once from 1/2012–9/2017 at an OCHIN-participating federally qualified health center. Using electronic health record data, I analyzed odds of HCV testing by number of concurrent diagnosed SUDs associated with HCV risk (those associated with injection or intranasal use: opioids, amphetamines, and cocaine). RESULTS: Among 269,124 youth who met inclusion criteria, (54.7% female, 62.5% non-white, mean age [SD] at testing 18.5 [2.2] years), 6812 (2.5%) were tested for HCV antibody, 122/6812 (1.8%) of those tested were anti-HCV positive, and of anti-HCV positive youth, 75.4% had additional diagnostic testing. Only 1 had documented HCV treatment. Each additional HCV risk-associated SUD was associated with higher odds of HCV testing, particularly in younger (OR 9.12, 95% CI 6.78, 12.4 in 13–15 year-olds, and OR 8.37, 95% CI 7.48, 9.36 in 16–18 year-olds) compared with older youth (OR 3.9, 95% CI 3.59, 4.24 in 19–21 year-olds). CONCLUSION: This study highlights important gaps in recommended HCV testing during the current opioid crisis. As the first step in the care cascade, addressing missed testing opportunities is critical for reducing hepatitis C burden. / 2020-09-28T00:00:00Z
180

Decline of miR-124 in Myeloid Cells Promotes Regulatory T-cell Development in Hepatitis C Virus Infection

Ren, Jun P., Wang, Lin, Zhao, Juan, Wang, Ling, Ning, Shun B., El Gazzar, Mohamed, Moorman, Jonathan P., Yao, Zhi Q. 18 October 2016 (has links)
Myeloid‐derived suppressor cells (MDSC s) and microRNA s (miRNA s) contribute to attenuating immune responses during chronic viral infection; however, the precise mechanisms underlying their suppressive activities remain incompletely understood. We have recently shown marked expansion of MDSC s that promote regulatory T (Treg) cell development in patients with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV ) infection. Here we further investigated whether the HCV ‐induced expansion of MDSC s and Treg cells is regulated by an miRNA ‐mediated mechanism. The RNA array analysis revealed that six miRNA s were up‐regulated and six miRNA s were down‐regulated significantly in myeloid cells during HCV infection. Real‐time RT ‐PCR confirmed the down‐regulation of miR‐124 in MDSC s from HCV patients. Bioinformatic analysis suggested that miR‐124 may be involved in the regulation of signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT ‐3), which was overexpressed in MDSC s from HCV patients. Notably, silencing of STAT ‐3 significantly increased the miR‐124 expression, whereas reconstituting miR‐124 decreased the levels of STAT ‐3, as well as interleukin‐10 and transforming growth factor‐β , which were overexpressed in MDCS s, and reduced the frequencies of Foxp3+ Treg cells that were developed during chronic HCV infection. These results suggest that reciprocal regulation of miR‐124 and STAT ‐3 in MDSC s promotes Treg cell development, thus uncovering a novel mechanism for the expansion of MDSC and Treg cells during HCV infection.

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