Spelling suggestions: "subject:"erbio"" "subject:"elbio""
131 |
Trombocitopenia con assenza del radio (sindrome TAR): verifica funzionale di due mutazioni nella regione del promotore del TGFβ2 e studio delle cellule staminali mesenchimaliMarchionni, Cosetta <1972> 11 May 2007 (has links)
No description available.
|
132 |
Baclofen e D-cicloserina come potenziali strumenti terapeutici nella dipendenza da sostanze: studi preclinici nel rattoRicci, Francesca <1978> 04 May 2007 (has links)
No description available.
|
133 |
Effetti neuroprotettivi del sulforafane in modelli in vitro di neurodegenerazioneMorroni, Fabiana <1978> 04 May 2007 (has links)
No description available.
|
134 |
Phytoplankton physiological responses under changing environmental conditionsRoncarati, Francesca <1977> 30 May 2007 (has links)
No description available.
|
135 |
The ecology of red fox predation on roe deer fawns with respect to population density, habitat and alternative preyPanzacchi, Manuela <1973> 20 April 2007 (has links)
No description available.
|
136 |
Studio anatomo-funzionale della parete posteriore del solco parieto-occipitale nel cervello di MacacoPassarelli, Lauretta <1976> 14 June 2007 (has links)
No description available.
|
137 |
Stem Cells as a therapy for myocardial infarction in animal modelsFiumana, Emanuela <1975> 09 June 2008 (has links)
Advances in stem cell biology have challenged the notion that infarcted myocardium is
irreparable. The pluripotent ability of stem cells to differentiate into specialized cell lines began
to garner intense interest within cardiology when it was shown in animal models that
intramyocardial injection of bone marrow stem cells (MSCs), or the mobilization of bone
marrow stem cells with spontaneous homing to myocardium, could improve cardiac function and
survival after induced myocardial infarction (MI) [1, 2]. Furthermore, the existence of stem cells
in myocardium has been identified in animal heart [3, 4], and intense research is under way in an
attempt to clarify their potential clinical application for patients with myocardial infarction. To
date, in order to identify the best one, different kinds of stem cells have been studied; these have
been derived from embryo or adult tissues (i.e. bone marrow, heart, peripheral blood etc.).
Currently, three different biologic therapies for cardiovascular diseases are under investigation:
cell therapy, gene therapy and the more recent “tissue-engineering” therapy .
During my Ph.D. course, first I focalised my study on the isolation and characterization of
Cardiac Stem Cells (CSCs) in wild-type and transgenic mice and for this purpose I attended, for
more than one year, the Cardiovascular Research Institute of the New York Medical College, in
Valhalla (NY, USA) under the direction of Doctor Piero Anversa. During this period I learnt
different Immunohistochemical and Biomolecular techniques, useful for investigating the
regenerative potential of stem cells.
Then, during the next two years, I studied the new approach of cardiac regenerative medicine
based on “tissue-engineering” in order to investigate a new strategy to regenerate the infracted
myocardium. Tissue-engineering is a promising approach that makes possible the creation of
new functional tissue to replace lost or failing tissue. This new discipline combines isolated
functioning cells and biodegradable 3-dimensional (3D) polymeric scaffolds. The scaffold
temporarily provides the biomechanical support for the cells until they produce their own
extracellular matrix. Because tissue-engineering constructs contain living cells, they may have
the potential for growth and cellular self-repair and remodeling. In the present study, I examined
whether the tissue-engineering strategy within hyaluron-based scaffolds would result in the
formation of alternative cardiac tissue that could replace the scar and improve cardiac function
after MI in syngeneic heterotopic rat hearts. Rat hearts were explanted, subjected to left coronary
descending artery occlusion, and then grafted into the abdomen (aorta-aorta anastomosis) of
receiving syngeneic rat. After 2 weeks, a pouch of 3 mm2 was made in the thickness of the
ventricular wall at the level of the post-infarction scar. The hyaluronic scaffold, previously
engineered for 3 weeks with rat MSCs, was introduced into the pouch and the myocardial edges
sutured with few stitches. Two weeks later we evaluated the cardiac function by M-Mode
echocardiography and the myocardial morphology by microscope analysis.
We chose bone marrow-derived mensenchymal stem cells (MSCs) because they have shown
great signaling and regenerative properties when delivered to heart tissue following a myocardial
infarction (MI). However, while the object of cell transplantation is to improve ventricular
function, cardiac cell transplantation has had limited success because of poor graft viability and
low cell retention, that’s why we decided to combine MSCs with a biopolimeric scaffold.
At the end of the experiments we observed that the hyaluronan fibres had not been
substantially degraded 2 weeks after heart-transplantation. Most MSCs had migrated to the
surrounding infarcted area where they were especially found close to small-sized vessels. Scar
tissue was moderated in the engrafted region and the thickness of the corresponding ventricular
wall was comparable to that of the non-infarcted remote area. Also, the left ventricular
shortening fraction, evaluated by M-Mode echocardiography, was found a little bit increased
when compared to that measured just before construct transplantation. Therefore, this study
suggests that post-infarction myocardial remodelling can be favourably affected by the grafting
of MSCs delivered through a hyaluron-based scaffold
|
138 |
Le tossine algali alterano proteine dell'adesione cellulareRonzitti, Giuseppe <1979> 09 June 2008 (has links)
No description available.
|
139 |
Evidenze molecolari del ruolo antiproliferativo e pro-apoptotico della clusterina in cellule epiteliali prostatiche umaneRizzi, Federica Maria Angela <1972> 09 June 2008 (has links)
The Clusterin (CLU) gene produces different forms of protein products which vary in their biological properties and distribution within the cell. Both the extra- and intracellular CLU forms regulate cell proliferation and apoptosis. Dis-regulation of CLU expression occurs in many cancer types, including prostate cancer. The role that CLU plays in tumorigenesis is still unclear.
We found that CLU over-expression inhibited cell proliferation and induced apoptosis in prostate cancer cells. Here we show that depletion of CLU affects the growth of PC-3 prostate cancer cells. Following siRNA, all protein products quickly disappeared, inducing cell cycle progression and higher expression of specific proliferation markers (i.e. H3 mRNA, PCNA and cyclins A, B1 and D) as detected by RT-qPCR and Western blot.
Quite surprisingly, we also found that the turnover of CLU protein is very rapid and tightly regulated by ubiquitin–proteasome mediated degradation. Inhibition of protein synthesis by cycloheximide showed that CLU half-life is less than 2 hours. All CLU protein products were found poly-ubiquitinated by co-immuniprecipitation. Proteasome inhibition by MG132 caused stabilization and accumulation of all CLU protein products, strongly inducing the nuclear form of CLU (nCLU) and committing cells to caspase-dependent death.
In conclusion, proteasome inhibition may induce prostate cancer cell death through accumulation of nCLU, a potential tumour suppressor factor.
|
140 |
Identification of Drosophila heart-specific Cis-Regulatory Modules under Hox controlTevy, Maria Florencia <1978> 09 June 2008 (has links)
Cardiac morphogenesis is a complex process governed by evolutionarily conserved
transcription factors and signaling molecules. The Drosophila cardiac tube is linear,
made of 52 pairs of cardiomyocytes (CMs), which express specific transcription
factor genes that have human homologues implicated in Congenital Heart Diseases
(CHDs) (NKX2-5, GATA4 and TBX5). The Drosophila cardiac tube is linear and
composed of a rostral portion named aorta and a caudal one called heart,
distinguished by morphological and functional differences controlled by Hox genes,
key regulators of axial patterning. Overexpression and inactivation of the Hox gene
abdominal-A (abd-A), which is expressed exclusively in the heart, revealed that abd-A
controls heart identity. The aim of our work is to isolate the heart-specific cisregulatory
sequences of abd-A direct target genes, the realizator genes granting heart
identity. In each segment of the heart, four pairs of cardiomyocytes (CMs) express
tinman (tin), homologous to NKX2-5, and acquire strong contractile and automatic
rhythmic activities. By tyramide amplified FISH, we found that seven genes, encoding
ion channels, pumps or transporters, are specifically expressed in the Tin-CMs of the
heart. We initially used online available tools to identify their heart-specific cisregutatory
modules by looking for Conserved Non-coding Sequences containing
clusters of binding sites for various cardiac transcription factors, including Hox
proteins. Based on these data we generated several reporter gene constructs and
transgenic embryos, but none of them showed reporter gene expression in the heart. In
order to identify additional abd-A target genes, we performed microarray experiments
comparing the transcriptomes of aorta versus heart and identified 144 genes
overexpressed in the heart. In order to find the heart-specific cis-regulatory regions of
these target genes we developed a new bioinformatic approach where prediction is
based on pattern matching and ordered statistics. We first retrieved Conserved Noncoding
Sequences from the alignment between the D.melanogaster and
D.pseudobscura genomes. We scored for combinations of conserved occurrences of
ABD-A, ABD-B, TIN, PNR, dMEF2, MADS box, T-box and E-box sites and we
ranked these results based on two independent strategies. On one hand we ranked the
putative cis-regulatory sequences according to best scored ABD-A biding sites, on the
other hand we scored according to conservation of binding sites. We integrated and
ranked again the two lists obtained independently to produce a final rank. We
generated nGFP reporter construct flies for in vivo validation. We identified three 1kblong
heart-specific enhancers. By in vivo and in vitro experiments we are determining
whether they are direct abd-A targets, demonstrating the role of a Hox gene in the
realization of heart identity. The identified abd-A direct target genes may be targets also
of the NKX2-5, GATA4 and/or TBX5 homologues tin, pannier and Doc genes,
respectively. The identification of sequences coregulated by a Hox protein and the
homologues of transcription factors causing CHDs, will provide a mean to test
whether these factors function as Hox cofactors granting cardiac specificity to Hox
proteins, increasing our knowledge on the molecular mechanisms underlying CHDs.
Finally, it may be investigated whether these Hox targets are involved in CHDs.
|
Page generated in 0.0302 seconds