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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

Análise proteômica das diversas fases de diferenciação osteoblástica de células-tronco mesenquimais de medula óssea / Proteomics analysis of the various stages of osteoblastic differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells from bone marrow

Leonardo Barcelos de Paula 13 December 2010 (has links)
O crescimento, desenvolvimento e manutenção do tecido ósseo são processos altamente regulados. Diversas proteínas como hormônios, fatores de crescimento e citocinas estão envolvidas nestes processos e exercem atividade direta sobre células osteoblástica e osteoclástica, atuando em sua diferenciação e ativação metabólica. O processo de regeneração óssea é iniciado por fatores estimuladores locais como as proteínas morfogenética óssea (BMP Bone Morphogenetic Proteins). As BMPs são um produto do metabolismo dos osteoblastos, odontoblastos e de várias células tumorais, sendo armazenadas na forma de concentrados no osso, dentina e em células neoplásicas do osteossarcoma e de certos tumores odontogênicos, tais como: fibroma cementificante, cementoblastoma benigno, dentinoma, fibroma odontogênico e odontoma. Esclarecer os mecanismos que controlam a remodelação óssea é uma questão bastante relevante. Nesse sentido, as células-tronco mesenquimais têm despertado grande interesse devido ao seu potencial envolvimento no processo de reparo tissular. A obtenção de osteoblastos funcionais a partir de células-tronco mesenquimais tem sido utilizada na engenharia de tecidos e terapia celular. Desse modo, no presente trabalho foi realizada uma análise proteômica das proteínas envolvidas nas diversas fases de diferenciação osteoblástica de células-tronco mesenquimais de medula óssea de rato Wistar e humana, no sentido de obter maiores informações sobre a diferenciação celular e a biologia do tecido ósseo. Células-tronco mesenquimais obtidas de medula óssea foram cultivadas em meio osteogênico por diferentes períodos para obter células em diversas fases da diferenciação osteoblástica. Para análise proteômica foram utilizadas ferramentas como a estratégia de shotgun proteomics e quantificação relativa (iTRAQ - Isobaric Tag for Relative and Absolute Quantitation) para separação de proteínas e a espectrometria de massas para a identificação e quantificação relativa de proteínas e peptídeos. Neste contexto, os nossos resultados nos levam a concluir que: as CTMs de medula óssea de rato Wistar expressam genes que estão envolvidos na diferenciação osteogênica quando estimuladas in vitro formando matriz óssea no período de 14 dias, ou seja, o fator estimulante no microambiente é de fundamental importância; as CTMs de medula óssea humana apresentaram resultados semelhantes com as CTMs de ratos em nível genômico durante a diferenciação osteogênica, entretanto quando estimuladas in vitro formaram a matriz óssea no período de 21 dias; utilizando duas abordagens proteômicas, foi possível identificar proteínas importantes que estão envolvidas no processo de diferenciação. Mas cabe salientar que, embora tenham sido detectados genes que parecem envolvidos no processo de diferenciação, isso não teve reflexo no proteoma dessas células nos períodos de 7 e 14 dias da indução de diferenciação à osteogênese, o que indica que a maior parte da funcionalidade dessas células quanto aos outros processos biológicos estão preservados, como por exemplo a proliferação celular permaneceu sem grandes alterações. Isso indica que manipulações de isolamento, cultivo e indução da diferenciação dessas células não afetaram o proteoma, com aspectos positivos para a utilização de células-tronco mesenquimais em terapia celular. Do ponto de vista metodológico, esse trabalho abre perspectivas da utilização de estratégias proteômicas baseadas na marcação por isóbaros em combinação com separação de proteínas por eletroforese unidimensional SDS-PAGE para a análise de amostras biologicamente complexas e de quantidades limitadas de obtenção como células-tronco mesenquimais. O estudo da expressão de proteínas durante as fases de diferenciação osteoblástica de células-tronco mesenquimais de medula óssea deve refletir seu estado funcional e contribuir para o entendimento das diversas vias envolvidas no processo de diferenciação. / The growth, development and maintenance of bone tissue are highly regulated processes. Several proteins such as hormones, growth factors and cytokines are actively involved in these processes and exert direct activity on osteoblastic and osteoclastic cells, acting in their differentiation and metabolic activation. The process of bone regeneration is initiated by local stimulating factors as bone morphogenetic proteins (BMP). BMPs are a product of the metabolism of osteoblasts, odontoblasts and various tumor cells and is stored in the form of concentrates in bone, dentin and neoplastic cells of osteosarcoma and certain odontogenic tumors such as fibroma cementifying, cementoblastoma benign dentinoma, odontogenic fibroma and odontoma. Clarify the mechanisms that control bone remodeling is a very relevant issue. Accordingly, the mesenchymal stem cells have attracted great interest because of its potential involvement in the process of tissue repair. Obtaining functional osteoblasts from mesenchymal stem cells has been used in tissue engineering and cell therapy. Thus, this present work performed a proteomic analysis of proteins involved in various stages of osteoblast differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells from bone marrow of Wistar rat and human, in order to obtain more information on the biology of cell differentiation and bone tissue. Mesenchymal stem cells obtained from bone marrow were cultured in osteogenic medium for different periods to obtain cells at different stages of osteoblast differentiation. For proteomics analysis tools were used as the strategy of shotgun proteomics and relative quantification (iTRAQ - isobaric Tag for Relative and Absolute quantitation) for protein separation and mass spectrometry to identify proteins. In this context, our results take us to conclude that the MSCs of Wistar rat bone marrow express genes that are involved in osteogenic differentiation in vitro when stimulated to form bone matrix during the 14 days, ie stimulating factor in the microenvironment is of fundamental importance, the MSCs from human bone marrow showed similar results with rat MSCs at the genomic level during osteogenic differentiation, however, when stimulated in vitro formed bone matrix within 21 days, using two proteomic approaches, we could identify proteins important that are involved in the process of differentiation. But it should be noted that although it has been identified genes that seem involved in the process of differentiation, it was not reflected in the proteome of these cells at 7 and 14 days after induction of the osteogenic differentiation, indicating that most of the functionality of these cells and other biological processes are preserved, such as cell proliferation remained without major changes. This indicates that manipulations of isolation, culture and induction of differentiation of these cells did not affect the proteome, with positive aspects to the use of mesenchymal stem cells in cell therapy. From the methodological point of view, this work opens up the use of proteomic strategies based on the score for isobars in combination with protein separation by electrophoresis, one-dimensional SDS-PAGE for the analysis of complex biological samples and limited quantities of production as mesenchymal stem cells. The study of protein expression during stages of osteoblast differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells from bone marrow should reflect their functional status and contribute to the understanding of pathways involved in the process of differentiation.
12

Estudio del desarrollo de la baya de vid y producción de resveratrol en cultivos celulares mediante las técnicas de proteómica cuantitativa DIGE e iTRAQ

Martínez Esteso, María José 19 September 2011 (has links)
No description available.
13

Recherche de biomarqueurs de la neurotoxicité des traitements anticancéreux à base d'oxaliplatine: approche protéomique quantitative

Ernoult, Emilie 22 April 2011 (has links) (PDF)
L'oxaliplatine est un médicament de référence dans les traitements des cancers colorectaux métastatiques. Toutefois, l'oxaliplatine occasionne une toxicité d'ordre neurologique qui retentit sur la qualité de vie de certains patients prédisposés. Nous avons analysé pour la première fois la neurotoxicité de l'oxaliplatine par une approche protéomique. Un protocole expérimental, associant marquage iTRAQ et fractionnement par IEFOFFGEL a tout d'abord été mis en place afin d'améliorer la couverture protéomique d'échantillons complexes. Puis, l'expression protéique différentielle après traitement par I'oxaliplatine a été analysée globalement, à la fois dans le protéome intracellulaire et dans le sécrétome d'un modèle cellulaire humain de nerotoxicité. L'analyse du protéome intracellulaire a permis l'identification de plus de 2700 protéines et offre de nouvelles perspectives quant aux mécanismes moléculaires de la neurotoxicité de I ' o x aliplatine. Le médicament aItère l'expression de protéines impliquées dans la réponse aux dommages à l'ADN, le contrôle du cycle cellulaire, le stress oxydatif , le métabolisme énergétique, le stress protéotoxique, la résistance multidrogue, la plasticité neuronale et l'homéostasie calcique. L'analyse du sécrétome a mis en évidence la sur-expression, suite au traitement par l'oxaliplatine, de 23 protéines sécrétées. Nous proposons pour la première fois les protéines Calmoduline, Thymosine beta-10 et le facteur neurotrophique Neudésine comme candidats biomarqueurs de la neurotoxicité des traitements anticancéreux à base d'oxaliplatine.
14

Proteomics of Oxidative Stress Using Inducible CYP2E1 Expressing HepG2 Cells and 3T3-L1 Adipocytes as Model Systems

Newton, Billy Walker 2011 May 1900 (has links)
The overall goal of this research was to investigate oxidative stress related changes to the proteomes of 3T3-L1 adipocytes and an inducible CYP2E1 expressing HepG2 cells. Enhanced oxidative stress in hypertrophic adipocytes is associated with metabolic dysregulation and insulin resistance. Because mitochondria generate reactive oxygen species (ROS), we monitored changes to the adipocyte mitochondrial proteome during differentiation and enlargement. We labeled mitochondrial extracts from 3T3-L1 cells that were 0, 4, 7, 10, 14, and 18 days post differentiation with iTRAQ, followed by MS based identification. We found citric acid cycle proteins such as pyruvate carboxylase, citrate synthase, as well as beta-oxidation enzymes; cartinine acyl transferase and long-chain enoyl-CoA hydratase up-regulated from 7 through 18 days post differentiation onset. These data indicate TCA up-regulation for enhanced metabolic and citrate output necessary for lipid synthesis in adipocytes. Paradoxically, the data also show the simultaneous increase in the fatty acid oxidation, indicating a metabolic overdrive state. Biochemical assays showing peaks in ATP and ROS generation in 3 day old adipocytes provide further evidence of this overdrive state. A second peak in ROS generation occurred in 10 day old adipocytes; concurrent ATP generation reduced to near pre-adipocyte levels and this may indicate a metabolic shift that may be responsible for increased oxidative stress in hypertrophic adipocytes. We developed a doxycycline inducible CYP2E1 expressing HepG2 cell line using the pTet-On/pRevTRE expression system to allow greater control and sensitivity in the generation CYP2E1 mediated oxidative stress. Our cell line (RD12) demonstrated stability and tight expression control. After induction, RD12 cells showed 30 percent higher CYP2E1 activity when compared to the constitutive E47 cell line. RD12 cells showed 30 percent greater toxicity than E47 cells and 25 percent less free glutathione when exposed to 20 mM acetaminophen, indicating RD12 cells are more sensitive to the effects reactive intermediates and oxidative stress generated by CYP2E1. We conducted a survey of the toxicity of dietary fatty acids (oleic, linoleic, and palmitic) on HepG2 cells to determine fatty acid doses that induced metabolic changes, but did not cause excessive cell death. The dose of 0.20 mM linoleic and palmitic acid for 48 hours produced low toxicity, but oleic acid actually produced lower toxicity than untreated cells. After exposure cells were treated with a pro-oxidant to determine which fatty acid increased the susceptibility to protein carbonylation. The carbonylated protein isolation procedure indicated the palmitic acid may induce more carbonylation than oleic acid, but greater efficiency in the isolation procedure is required for a confidant determination.
15

Alternative strategies for proteomic analysis and relative protein quantitation

McQueen, Peter 01 1900 (has links)
The main approach to studying the proteome is a technique called data dependent acquisition (DDA). In DDA, peptides are analyzed by mass spectrometry to determine the protein composition of a biological isolate. However, DDA is limited in its ability to analyze the proteome, in that it only selects the most abundant ions for analysis, and different protein identifications can result even if the same sample is analyzed multiple times in succession. Data independent acquisition (DIA) is a newly developed method that should be able to solve these limitations and improve our ability to analyze the proteome. We used an implementation of DIA (SWATH) to perform relative protein quantitation in the model bacterial system, Clostridium stercorarium, using two different carbohydrate sources, and found that it was able to provide precise quantitation of proteins and was overall more consistent in its ability to identify components of the proteome than DDA. Relative quantitation of proteins is an important method that can determine which proteins are important to a biochemical process of interest. How we determine which proteins are differentially regulated between different conditions is an important question in proteomic analysis. We developed a new approach to analyzing differential protein expression using variation between biological replicates to determine which proteins are being differentially regulated between two conditions. This analysis showed that a large proportion of proteins identified by quantitative proteomic analysis can be differentially regulated and that these proteins are in fact related to biological processes. Analyzing changes in protein expression is a useful tool that can pinpoint many key processes in biological systems. However, these techniques fail to take into account that enzyme activity is regulated by other factors than controlling their level of expression. Activity based protein profiling (ABPP) is a method that can determine the activity state of an enzyme in whole cell proteomes. We found that enzyme activity can change in response to a number of different conditions and that these changes do not always correspond with compositional changes. Mass spectrometry techniques were also used to identify serine hydrolases and characterize their expression in this organism. / February 2016
16

Biomarkers of Optic Nerve Head Glial Cell Activation Following Biomechanical Insult

Rogers, Ronan 31 August 2012 (has links)
Glaucoma is a leading cause of irreversible blindness worldwide. Primary Open Angle Glaucoma is the most common form of the disease and can be characterized by the slow and irreversible apoptotic death of retinal ganglion cells, a unique optic nerve neuropathy resulting in loss of vision. Increased intra-ocular pressure is known to be a leading risk-factor for glaucoma, and lowering IOP is currently the only evidence based method for the clinical management of the disease. However the exact mechanism by which an elevated IOP leads to the death of the retinal ganglion cells is still poorly understood. By using previous finite element models of glaucoma to quantify the biomechanical environment within the optic nerve head we have built human primary cell culture models in an attempt to replicate aspects of early glaucomatous optic neuropathy. In these models we mimic the in vivo biomechanical environment in the lamina cribrosa by growing human optic nerve head astrocytes and lamina cribrosa cells on compliant substrates and subjecting the cells to deformation. Specifically, a global protein scan using isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantitation (iTRAQ) was performed on all the experiments to identify potential biomarkers for glaucoma. A secondary analysis using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) identified extracellular proteins of interest. Over 520 proteins were identified in response to biomechnical strain from both cell types. Many of these proteins centred on TGF-, p53 and TNF, which have previously been shown to play a role in the pathogenesis of glaucoma. Proteins found in astrocytes were astrocytic phosphoprotein (PEA15), UDP-glucose dehydrogenase (UGDH), and annexin A4 (ANXA4). LC proteins were bcl-2-associated athanogene 5 (BAG5), nucleolar protein 66 (NO66) and Eukaryotic translation initiation factor 5A (eIF-5A). These proteomic results will enable a series of functional studies looking into the role select markers play in ONH glial cell activation, a process still not well understood. Candidates for this work will be prioritized based on novelty and relevance to mechanisms of cellular stress and death. We hypothesize that study of these molecular pathways will provide insight into this process, as well as improve our understanding of how glial activation contributes to the development of glaucomatous optic neuropathy.
17

Biomarkers of Optic Nerve Head Glial Cell Activation Following Biomechanical Insult

Rogers, Ronan 31 August 2012 (has links)
Glaucoma is a leading cause of irreversible blindness worldwide. Primary Open Angle Glaucoma is the most common form of the disease and can be characterized by the slow and irreversible apoptotic death of retinal ganglion cells, a unique optic nerve neuropathy resulting in loss of vision. Increased intra-ocular pressure is known to be a leading risk-factor for glaucoma, and lowering IOP is currently the only evidence based method for the clinical management of the disease. However the exact mechanism by which an elevated IOP leads to the death of the retinal ganglion cells is still poorly understood. By using previous finite element models of glaucoma to quantify the biomechanical environment within the optic nerve head we have built human primary cell culture models in an attempt to replicate aspects of early glaucomatous optic neuropathy. In these models we mimic the in vivo biomechanical environment in the lamina cribrosa by growing human optic nerve head astrocytes and lamina cribrosa cells on compliant substrates and subjecting the cells to deformation. Specifically, a global protein scan using isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantitation (iTRAQ) was performed on all the experiments to identify potential biomarkers for glaucoma. A secondary analysis using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) identified extracellular proteins of interest. Over 520 proteins were identified in response to biomechnical strain from both cell types. Many of these proteins centred on TGF-, p53 and TNF, which have previously been shown to play a role in the pathogenesis of glaucoma. Proteins found in astrocytes were astrocytic phosphoprotein (PEA15), UDP-glucose dehydrogenase (UGDH), and annexin A4 (ANXA4). LC proteins were bcl-2-associated athanogene 5 (BAG5), nucleolar protein 66 (NO66) and Eukaryotic translation initiation factor 5A (eIF-5A). These proteomic results will enable a series of functional studies looking into the role select markers play in ONH glial cell activation, a process still not well understood. Candidates for this work will be prioritized based on novelty and relevance to mechanisms of cellular stress and death. We hypothesize that study of these molecular pathways will provide insight into this process, as well as improve our understanding of how glial activation contributes to the development of glaucomatous optic neuropathy.
18

Proteómica de expresión diferencial en Acinetobacter baumanii resistente a colistina

Rodríguez Falcón, Manuel 07 October 2010 (has links)
Normally present in water, soil and waste water, Acinetobacter baumannii has become an important nosocomial pathogen, as causal agent of pneumonias, septicemias and urinary tract infections, among other complications in compromised patients from hospital’s intensive care units. One of its last acquired abilities is the resistance to colistin (polymixin E), the last therapeutic option for its infections. In this thesis, descriptive and quantitative differential expression proteomics is used in the study of acquired colistin resistance. As result of this research, 1,097 proteins belonging to the Acinetobacter genus have been identified by combined application of bidimensional gel electrophoresis (2DE), differential gel electrophoresis (DIGE), and peptide labeling with stable isobaric isotopes tags (iTRAQ). Analyses have been performed on the global expressed proteome of a reference, colistin-sensible strain (A. baumannii ATCC 19606) and, for comparative purposes, on a derived strain on which colistin resistance has been induced in vitro. The resistant phenotype shows reduced fitness, with significant differences in expression found in outer membrane proteins, membrane active transporters, diverse metabolic enzymes (fatty acids, citrate, phenylacetate, piruvate and nitrogen), proteins involved in stress response and biofilm formation, as well as in protein synthesis and folding pathways. The work has allowed to assess the strengths and weaknesses of the different techniques currently used in this type of proteomic analysis. / Acinetobacter baumannii, normalmente aislado en suelos y aguas (corrientes o residuales), se ha convertido en importante patógeno nosocomial, siendo agente causal de, entre otras complicaciones, neumonías, septicemias e infecciones del tracto urinario de pacientes comprometidos en unidades hospitalarias de cuidados intensivos. La más reciente de sus capacidades adquiridas es la resistencia a colistina (polimixina E), antibiótico peptídico considerado la última opción terapéutica en contextos clínicos. Esta tesis doctoral emplea la proteómica descriptiva y de expresión diferencial cuantitativa para investigar la resistencia adquirida por A. baumannii a dicho antibiótico. Los resultados han supuesto la identificación de 1.097 proteínas de Acinetobacter mediante el empleo combinado de electroforesis bidimensional convencional (2DE), 2DE diferencial (DIGE) y marcaje peptídico mediante isótopos isobáricos estables (iTRAQ). Los análisis se han realizado en el proteoma expresado por una cepa de referencia sensible a colistina (A. baumannii ATCC 19606), así como en una cepa derivada de ésta en la que se ha inducido, a efectos comparativos, resistencia a colistina in vitro. El fenotipo resistente manifestó reducida adaptabilidad biológica, encontrándose las principales diferencias en la estructura de la membrana externa, en la expresión de transportadores activos de membrana, en diversos enzimas metabólicos (ácidos grasos, citrato, fenilacetato, piruvato, nitrógeno) y de respuesta a condiciones de estrés, así como en la expresión de proteínas participantes en la formación de biopelículas y en el proceso de síntesis y plegamiento de proteínas. Además, el trabajo ha permitido evaluar los puntos fuertes y débiles de las técnicas empleadas actualmente en este tipo de análisis proteómicos.
19

Proteomic profiling of matched normal and tumour tongue biopsies from smokers and non-smokers. Oncoproteomic applications for oral tongue squamous cell carcinoma biomarker discovery

Saeed, Sidra January 2021 (has links)
Despite considerable development in the therapeutic repertoire for managing cancer-related malignancies, head and neck cancer mortality has not significantly improved. The burden of HNSCC fluctuates across countries and has been associated with exposure to tobacco-derived carcinogens, excessive alcohol consumption or combinations. Due to late detection, patients often present with oral pre-malignant lesions which have progressed to an advanced stage of HNSCC. In this study, the samples were from a male cohort as generally, men are at two to four-fold higher risk than women with over 90% of HNSCCs arising in the upper aerodigestive tract. Therefore, the purpose of this thesis was to identify HNSCC biomarkers in males associated within defined anatomical region (tongue) and causative agents, specific to smoking. An iTRAQ proteomic approach was used to profile protein changes in matched normal and tumour samples from male non-smoking (n=6) and smoking patients (n=6) with tongue carcinomas revealing identification of potential targets specific to cancer. Samples were subjected to liquid nitrogen cryo-pulverisation and protein determination. Protein extracts from the same category were pooled, trypsin digested and iTRAQ 4-plex labelled. Data was generated by 2D-LC/MS on an Orbitrap Fusion and significantly changed proteins (median ± SD) were subject to bioinformatics appraisal. A total of 3426 proteins were identified and quantified by proteomic analysis. Comparison of non-smoker tumour (NS:T) with smoker tumour (S:T) distinguished 64 proteins that were upregulated and 62 downregulated, S:T vs S:N categorised 349 proteins up- and 395 down-regulated respectively and NS:T vs NS:N identified 469 proteins up- and 431 down-regulated, respectively. Arginase-1 (ARG1), Keratin Type-2 Cytoskeletal 8 (KRT8), Lipocalin-1 (LCN1) and DNA replication licensing factor MCM2 (MCM2) were identified as biologically associated with smoking compared to non-smoking, providing viable targets for verification by immunochemical methods which further supported the proteomic data. Overall, the project demonstrated the importance of using matched biopsies with good clinicopathological data for experimental design and provided a set of unique targets for a more expanded verification study.
20

Dynamic Collision Induced Dissociation - A Novel Fragmentation Method in the Quadrupole Ion Trap

Laskay, Ünige A. 24 April 2009 (has links)
No description available.

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