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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

Investigations of telomere maintenance in DNA damage response defective cells and telomerase in brain tumours

Cabuy, Erik January 2005 (has links)
Telomeres are nucleoprotein complexes located at the end of chromosomes. They have an essential role in protecting chromosome ends. Telomerase or ALT (alternative lengthening of telomeres) mechanisms maintain telomeres by compensating natural telomeric loss. We have set up a flow-FISH method and using mouse lymphoma cell lines we identified unexpectedly the presence of subpopulations of cells with different telomere lengths. Subpopulations of cells with different telomere lengths were also observed in a human ALT and non-ALT cell line. Differences in telomere length between subpopulations of cells were significant and we term this phenomenon TELEFLUCS (TElomere LEngth FLUctuations in Cell Subpopulations). By applying flow-FISH we could successfully measure telomere lengths during replicative senescence in human primary fibroblasts with different genetic defects that confer sensitivity to ionising radiation (IR). The results from this study, based on flow-FISH and Southern hybridisation measurements, revealed an accelerated rate of telomere shortening in radiosensitive fibroblasts. We also observed accelerated telomere shortening in murine BRCA1 deficient cells, another defect conferring radiosensitivity, in comparison with a BRCA1 proficient cell line. We transiently depleted BRCA1 by siRNAs in two human mammary epithelial cell lines but could not find changes in telomere length in comparison with control cells. Cytological evidence of telomere dysfunction was observed in all radiosensitive cell lines. These results suggest that mechanisms that confer sensitivity to IR may be linked with mechanisms that cause telomere dysfunction. Furthermore, we have been able to show that human ALT positive cell lines show dysfunctional telomeres as detected by either the presence of DSBs at their telomeres or cytogenetic analysis and usually cells with dysfunctional telomeres are sensitive to IR. Finally, we assessed hTERT mRNA splicing variants and telomerase activity in brain tumours, which exhibit considerable chromosome instability suggesting that DNA repair mechanisms may be impaired. We demonstrated that high levels of hTERT mRNAs and telomerase activity correlate with proliferation rate. The presence of hTERT splice variants did not strictly correlate with absence of telomerase activity but hTERT spliced transcripts were observed in some telomerase negative brain tumours suggesting that hTERT splicing may contribute to activation of ALT mechanisms.
2

Postupné molekulární změny v primárních prasečích buňkách exprimujících mutovaný huntingtín / Gradual Molecular Changes in Primary Porcine Cells Expressing Mutated Huntingtin

Šmatlíková, Petra January 2019 (has links)
Huntington's disease (HD) is inherited fatal disorder caused by CAG triplet expansions in the huntingtin gene resulting in the expression of mutated huntingtin protein (mtHtt). The main symptoms of HD are neurodegeneration, osteoporosis, testicular degeneration, loss of muscle tissue and heart muscle malfunction, weight loss, metabolic changes, and sleeping disturbances. Since huntingtin protein (Htt) has a role in several biological processes, many molecular mechanisms, like oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction, DNA-damage, and others, are affected by mtHtt. However, its exact pathogenic mechanisms in HD are still not well understood. Transgenic minipig model of HD (TgHD) serves an opportunity to isolate unlimited number of primary cells and unlike primary cells obtained from HD patients, often in the late stages of the disease, the TgHD minipig model allows to monitor molecular changes occurring gradually with age and progression of the disease. Thus, TgHD minipig model and primary cells isolated from it play an important role in investigating and understanding the underlying mechanistic cause of HD. We focused on molecular and cellular changes in primary cells isolated from TgHD minipigs and their wild type (WT) controls at different ages (24, 36, and 48 months). In mesenchymal stem cells...
3

Roles of the multifunctional protein E4F1 in cellular senescence / Rôles de la protéine multifonctionnelle E4F1 au cours de la senescence

Maciejewska, Zuzanna 14 December 2010 (has links)
Le facteur de transcription E4F1 fût initialement identifié comme une cible cellulaire de l'oncoprotéine virale E1A au cours de l'infection par l'adénovirus sérotype V. E4F1 est une protéine multifonctionelle essentielle au cours du développement embryonnaire précoce et joue des rôles importants dans l'équilibre entre prolifération/survie de différents types cellulaires, notamment des cellules souches. Au niveau moléculaire, E4F1 possède des activités transcriptionelles intrinsèques mais possède également une activité ubiquitine E3 ligase atypique dirigée contre d'autres facteurs de transcription tel que le suppresseur de tumeur p53. Récemment, il a été démontré qu'E4F1 régule les voies oncogéniques impliquant p53 et Rb qui jouent un rôle essentiel au cours de la sénescence cellulaire. La sénescence, qui est définie par un arrêt irréversible du cycle cellulaire, est considéré comme un mécanisme suppresseur de tumeurs essentiel au cours des phases précoces du développement tumoral. L'objectif de ma thèse a été d'évaluer le rôle d'E4F1 au cours de la sénescence cellulaire. Au travers d'études menées sur des fibroblastes humains primaires et des fibroblastes embryonnaires murins dérivés de souris génétiquement modifiées pour le gène E4F1, j'ai examiné comment la perturbation des activités d'E4F1 module l'initiation ou le maintien de la sénescence prématurée induit par l'oncogène RAS, la déplétion du membre de la famille polycomb Bmi1, ou par les dommages à l'ADN. Mes résultats suggèrent que la déplétion d'E4F1 protège partiellement contre l'induction de la sénescence alors que l'expression ectopique d'E4F1 accélère la sénescence par son implication dans la voie INK4A/ARF-p53. L'ensemble de mes résultats supportent la notion qu'E4F1 est un régulateur important de la sénescence cellulaire. / E4F1 was originally identified as a cellular target of the viral oncoprotein E1A during adenoviral infection. E4F1 is a multifunctional protein that is essential during early embryogenesis and plays important roles in the proliferation/survival balance of different cell types including stem cells. At the molecular level, E4F1 exhibits intrinsic transcriptional activities but also an ubiquitin E3 ligase function that targets other transcription factors, including the p53 tumor suppressor. Recent studies indicate that E4F1 impinge on several pathways, including the Rb and p53 pathways, that are known to influence cellular senescence, an irreversible state of cell cycle arrest that is considered to be an essential tumor suppressor mechanism during early steps of tumorigenesis. The objective of my thesis was to evaluate the roles of E4F1 during cellular senescence. Using human primary fibroblasts and mouse embryonic fibroblasts derived from genetic ally engineered mouse models, I investigated how perturbations of E4F1 activities modulated the initiation or the maintenance of premature senescence induced by oncogenic Ras, depletion of the polycomb member Bmi1 or DNA damage. My results suggest that E4F1 depletion partly protects from the induction of cellular senescence whereas ectopic expression of E4F1 accelerates premature senescence through its implication in the Ink4a/ARF-p53 pathway. Altogether, my results support the notion that E4F1 is an important regulator of cellular senescence.
4

Vliv mutovaného huntingtinu na oxidativní stres v primárních fibroblastech izolovaných z knock-in miniprasečího modelu pro Huntingtonovu nemoc / The impact of mutant huntingtin on oxidative stress in primary fibroblasts isolated from a new Huntington's disease knock in porcine model

Sekáč, Dávid January 2020 (has links)
Huntington's chorea is a dominantly inherited disease caused by trinucleotide (Cytosine-Adenine -Guanine) expansion in a gene coding huntingtin protein. Carriers of these mutation show symptoms associated with motor impairment, a cognitive and psychiatric disturbance, which is called Huntington's disease (HD). The major sign of HD is striatal atrophy in the middle age of life. Since it is known that huntingtin protein participates in a lot of cellular processes, such as transcriptional regulation and metabolism, these processes change by its mutation. One of the features observed in HD pathogenesis is the presence of oxidative stress. The aim of the work was to monitor the molecular changes preceding the HD manifestation in the knock-in minipig model. As a material for monitoring molecular changes leading to this condition, primary fibroblasts were used. Whereas, the oxidative stress arises from an imbalance between oxidants and antioxidants, level of reactive species and lipid peroxidation together with expression of antioxidant response associated genes was measured. At the same time, expression of metabolic and DNA repair related genes was monitored. Although the differences in oxidative stress level or the expression of antioxidative response genes were not detected, the changes in the...

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