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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.
11

Role of macrophages in healing the fibrotic lung : pan hydroxylase inhibition as a potential therapeutic mechanism

Alber, Andreas January 2013 (has links)
Pulmonary fibrosis is a common consequence of lung inflammation, leading to organ dysfunction and significant morbidity and mortality. Macrophages, through their diverse functions associated with polarisation status, play a role in lung homeostasis and alternatively activated (M2) macrophages have been associated with lung fibrosis. Prolyl hydroxylases (PHDs) are the main oxygen sensors and regulators of hypoxia inducible factors (HIFs). The PHD/HIF pathway is known to play a role in tissue inflammation and fibrosis, but their role in macrophage polarisation is not fully understood. Aim To study the role of the PHD/HIF pathway in macrophage polarisation and lung fibrosis, and specifically in Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis (IPF). Hypothesis It was hypothesised that pan hydroxylase inhibition alters macrophage polarisation and modulates lung inflammation and fibrosis. Methods A combination of pharmacological (pan hydroxylase inhibitors DMOG and FG41) and genetic (HIF and PHD-null) tools were used to manipulate the PHD/HIF pathway. The bleomycin induced lung fibrosis model was used to define the effect of pan hydroxylase inhibition during the early, inflammatory or the late, fibrotic phase of this model. Murine bone marrow derived macrophages (BMDM), human monocyte derived macrophages and alveolar macrophages obtained from patients with lung fibrosis were used to study the effect of pan hydroxylase inhibition on macrophage polarisation. Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) from patients was used to define the association between lung CCL18, an M2 associated chemokine, and disease progression in IPF. Results DMOG therapy during the early phase of the bleomycin model significantly reduced lung fibrosis at day 24. In contrast, late phase pan hydroxylase inhibition enhanced lung fibrosis at day 24. In both instances there was evidence of enhanced alveolar macrophage M2-like polarisation following pan hydroxylase inhibition. Reduced fibrosis after early pan hydroxylase inhibition was not a consequence of reduced acute lung inflammation or direct inhibition of collagen synthesis. In BMDM, pan hydroxylase inhibition resulted in an ‘augmented M2-like’ macrophage. Using LysM-Cre HIF-1α, HIF-2α and PHD-3 KO mice as well as chetomin, a potent inhibitor of HIF-1α and HIF-2α mediated gene expression, the HIF-dependent and HIF-independent polarisation markers were defined. PHD-3 deficiency was not sufficient to enhance M2 skewing. In contrast to murine BMDM, in human monocyte derived macrophages and alveolar macrophages from healthy volunteers and patients with interstitial lung disease including IPF, pan hydroxylase inhibition did not augment M2 polarisation and indeed significantly inhibited macrophage CCL18 expression. CCL18 studies in clinical BALF samples confirmed that CCL18 was elevated in the lungs of patients with IPF and other ILDs compared to controls. However, baseline BALF CCL18 concentrations did not correlate with disease severity or with disease progression, suggesting this is not a useful biomarker in IPF. Further, a unique study of serial BAL in IPF patients showed no association between 12-month change in CCL18 and disease progression over the same period. Indeed CCL18 concentrations mostly fell over 12 months in patients that did progress, strongly suggesting that CCL18 does not play a major pathogenic role in IPF. Concluding, it was shown that in both BMDM and murine lung pan hydroxylase inhibition promoted an ‘augmented M2-like’ polarisation. Pharmacological pan hydroxylase inhibition during the late fibrotic phase of injury enhanced fibrosis but it is not known if there was a causal association between M2 macrophages and lung fibrosis. Similarly, the functional relevance of finding enhanced M2 polarisation observed during early DMOG therapy, which subsequently resulted in attenuated fibrosis, is not known. In human macrophages, pan hydroxylase inhibition unexpectedly attenuated CCL18 production, a chemokine associated with an M2-like phenotype in man whilst other M2 markers were unchanged. However, there was no evidence to support a pathogenic role for CCL18 in IPF, and therefore there is little potential for using pan hydroxylase inhibition to target CCL18 and treat IPF.
12

Probing the active site of cytochrome P450 CYP2C9 /

Aoyama, Ronald Gordon. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2003. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 135-141).
13

Clinical utility, cost-effectiveness and provider perceptions of CYP2C9 and VKORC1 genotyping for chronic warfarin therapy /

Meckley, Lisa M. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2008. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 91-124).
14

CDNA cloning and characterization of enzymes that synthesize bile acids, vitamin D and waxes

Cheng, Jeffrey Binyan. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, 2006. / Embargoed. Vita. Bibliography: 217-242.
15

Interaction of phthalazines with molybdenum hydroxylases. Phthalazine and its 1-substituted derivatives as substrates, inhibitors and inducers of aldehyde oxidase and xanthine oxidase, both in vitro and in vivo.

Johnson, Christine January 1983 (has links)
The interaction of the 2,3-diazanaphthalene, phthalazine and its 1-substituted derivatives with the molybdenum hydroxylases, aldehyde oxidase and xanthine oxidase, has been investigated both in vivo and /Ok in vitro. Metabolic studies, carried out by treating rabbits with both cold and 14C-labelled phthalazine, have shown that this compound is extensively metabolised in vivo, the major metabolite being a glucuronide conjugate. Very little unchanged phthalazine or its molybdenum hydroxylase mediated oxidation product 1-hydroxyphthalazine were excreted in the urine. Pretreatment of rabbits with phthalazine or 1-hydroxyphthalazine had no effect upon the activity of the microsomal monooxygenases but caused a significant increase in the specific activities of both aldehyde oxidase and xanthine oxidase. Determination of the molybdenum content of purified aldehyde oxidase fractions using electrothermal atomic absorption spectroscopy has confirmed that an increase in the molybdenum content of the enzyme fraction accompanies the increase in activity. A qualitative assessment of purified aldehyde oxidase fractions using iso-electric focusing has indicated that this enzyme may be composed of 2 or 3 active variants and following pretreatment with either phthalazine or 1-hydroxyphthalazine a further band of enzyme activity is apparent on the electropherogram. The Km value for phthalazine is significantly reduced with enzyme prepared from phthalazine treated rabbits, indicating that a form of the enzyme with a high affinity for phthalazine may have been induced. 1-Hydrazinophthalazine (Hydralazine) and two other hydrazine substituted N-heterocycles, endralazine and 1-hydrazinoisoquinoline have been shown to exert a potent progressive inhibition of aldehyde oxidase in vitro, effective only in the presence of substrate, but are inactive towards xanthine oxidase. In addition, administration of hydralazine to rabbits results in a significant reduction in liver aldehyde oxidase activity. Investigations into the interaction of some of the metabolites of hydralazine with aldehyde oxidase in vitro suggest that hydralazine is also the inhibiting species in vivo. / The Ransom Fellowship awarded by The Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain,
16

A comparative study of cytochromes P450 2E1 and 2A6 : substrate dynamics, multiple ligand binding, and adduct formatioin by N-acetyl-m-aminophenol /

Harrelson, John P. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2005. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 200-205).
17

Genetically determined interindividual variation in cytochrome P450 dependent drug metabolism : molecular basis and clinical implications /

Sim, Sarah C., January 2007 (has links)
Diss. (sammanfattning) Stockholm : Karolinska institutet, 2007. / Härtill 4 uppsatser + 1 appendix.
18

A Study of Aryl Hydrocarbon Hydroxylase in Cultured Human Lymphocytes

Guyden, Jerry C. 08 1900 (has links)
Aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase activity was studied in cultured human lymphocytes using 3-methylcholanthrene, 1,2- benzanthracene, and 4'-bromoflavone as inducers. The substrates used to run the 60 minute assay were benzo(α)pyrene and diphenyloxazole. At the optimum bromoflavone concentration for induction of aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase, the induced enzymatic activity compared favorably with that of aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase induced by 3MC in a 96 hour lymphocyte culture using BP as the assay substrate. The whole cell human lymphocyte system was found to have as much or more activity in 20 ml vials using Joklik's-Modified Minimum Essential Medium at a pH optimum of 7.5 with no co-factor added as did the Roswell Park assay system. The whole cell assay showed that levels of aryl hydrocarbonhydroxylase inducibility in lumphocytes from smokers and non-smokers varied without regard to the subjects' smoking habits. The assay system also indicated that intact lymphocytes generate a similar group of benzo(α)pyrene metabolites as that produced by a hepatic microsomal preparation from C57B1/6J mice.
19

Interaction of phthalazines with molybdenum hydroxylases : phthalazine and its 1-substituted derivatives as substrates, inhibitors and inducers of aldehyde oxidase and xanthine oxidase, both in vitro and in vivo

Johnson, Christine January 1983 (has links)
The interaction of the 2,3-diazanaphthalene, phthalazine and its 1-substituted derivatives with the molybdenum hydroxylases, aldehyde oxidase and xanthine oxidase, has been investigated both in vivo and in vitro. Metabolic studies, carried out by treating rabbits with both cold and ¹⁴C-labelled phthalazine, have shown that this compound is extensively metabolised in vivo, the major metabolite being a glucuronide conjugate. Very little unchanged phthalazine or its molybdenum hydroxylase mediated oxidation product 1-hydroxyphthalazine were excreted in the urine. Pretreatment of rabbits with phthalazine or 1-hydroxyphthalazine had no effect upon the activity of the microsomal monooxygenases but caused a significant increase in the specific activities of both aldehyde oxidase and xanthine oxidase. Determination of the molybdenum content of purified aldehyde oxidase fractions using electrothermal atomic absorption spectroscopy has confirmed that an increase in the molybdenum content of the enzyme fraction accompanies the increase in activity. A qualitative assessment of purified aldehyde oxidase fractions using iso-electric focusing has indicated that this enzyme may be composed of 2 or 3 active variants and following pretreatment with either phthalazine or 1-hydroxyphthalazine a further band of enzyme activity is apparent on the electropherogram. The Km value for phthalazine is significantly reduced with enzyme prepared from phthalazine treated rabbits, indicating that a form of the enzyme with a high affinity for phthalazine may have been induced. 1-Hydrazinophthalazine (Hydralazine) and two other hydrazine substituted N-heterocycles, endralazine and 1-hydrazinoisoquinoline have been shown to exert a potent progressive inhibition of aldehyde oxidase in vitro, effective only in the presence of substrate, but are inactive towards xanthine oxidase. In addition, administration of hydralazine to rabbits results in a significant reduction in liver aldehyde oxidase activity. Investigations into the interaction of some of the metabolites of hydralazine with aldehyde oxidase in vitro suggest that hydralazine is also the inhibiting species in vivo.
20

Interindividual variation in drug metabolism with focus on polymorphic cytochrome P450 2C9 /

Sandberg Lundblad, Mia, January 2005 (has links)
Diss. (sammanfattning) Stockholm : Karolinska institutet, 2005. / Härtill 5 uppsatser.

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