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Objective:
Over the past decade, myocardial triglyceride content has become an accepted biomarker for chronic metabolic and cardiac disease. The purpose of this study was to use proton (hydrogen 1)-magnetic resonance spectroscopy (\(^{1}\)H-MRS) at 3Tesla (3 T) field strength to assess potential gender-related differences in myocardial triglyceride content in healthy individuals.
Methods:
Cardiac MR imaging was performed to enable accurate voxel placement and obtain functional and morphological information. Double triggered (i.e., ECG and respiratory motion gating) \(^{1}\)H-MRS was used to quantify myocardial triglyceride levels for each gender. Two-sample t-test and Mann-Whitney U-test were used for statistical analyses.
Results:
In total, 40 healthy volunteers (22 male, 18 female; aged >18 years and age matched) were included in the study. Median myocardial triglyceride content was 0.28% (interquartile range [IQR] 0.17–0.42%) in male and 0.24% (IQR 0.14–0.45%) in female participants, and no statistically significant difference was observed between the genders. Furthermore, no gender-specific difference in ejection fraction was observed, although on average, male participants presented with a higher mean ± SD left ventricular mass (136.3 ± 25.2 g) than female participants (103.9 ± 16.1 g).
Conclusions:
The study showed that \(^{1}\)H-MRS is a capable, noninvasive tool for acquisition of myocardial triglyceride metabolites. Myocardial triglyceride concentration was shown to be unrelated to gender in this group of healthy volunteers.
Analysis of cerebral glucose metabolism following experimental subarachnoid hemorrhage over 7 days
(2023)
Little is known about changes in brain metabolism following SAH, possibly leading towards secondary brain damage. Despite sustained progress in the last decade, analysis of in vivo acquired data still remains challenging. The present interdisciplinary study uses a semi-automated data analysis tool analyzing imaging data independently from the administrated radiotracer. The uptake of 2-[18F]Fluoro-2-deoxy-glucose ([\(^{18}\)F]FDG) was evaluated in different brain regions in 14 male Sprague–Dawley rats, randomized into two groups: (1) SAH induced by the endovascular filament model and (2) sham operated controls. Serial [\(^{18}\)F]FDG-PET measurements were carried out. Quantitative image analysis was performed by uptake ratio using a self-developed MRI-template based data analysis tool. SAH animals showed significantly higher [\(^{18}\)F]FDG accumulation in gray matter, neocortex and olfactory system as compared to animals of the sham group, while white matter and basal forebrain region showed significant reduced tracer accumulation in SAH animals. All significant metabolic changes were visualized from 3 h, over 24 h (day 1), day 4 and day 7 following SAH/sham operation. This [\(^{18}\)F]FDG-PET study provides important insights into glucose metabolism alterations following SAH—for the first time in different brain regions and up to day 7 during course of disease.
Bei Daidzein und Bisphenol A handelt es sich um zwei Vertreter einer Klasse von Stoffen, die als „Umwelthormone“ (engl. endocrine disrupter) bezeichnet werden. Aus der Gruppe der Phytoöstrogene wurde Daidzein als wichtiger Vertreter, der in hohen Konzentrationen in vielen Nutzpflanzen und Nahrungsmitteln vorkommt, ausgewählt. Sojaprodukte, die den größten Beitrag einer menschlichen Exposition gegen Daidzein liefern, werden in zunehmendem Maße auch in westlichen Ländern konsumiert. Bisphenol A wurde als Vertreter der Xenoöstrogene gewählt, da es - was Weltjahresproduktion und Verwendung angeht - die wohl wichtigste Substanz dieser Gruppe darstellt. Im ersten Teil der Arbeit wurde die Biotransformation und Toxikokinetik der beiden Verbindungen nach oraler Gabe in der Ratte aufgeklärt. Dabei konnte gezeigt werden, daß die orale Bioverfügbarkeit beider Substanzen in der Ratte sehr gering war. Maximal zehn Prozent der jeweils applizierten Dosis konnten im Urin der Tiere wiedergefunden werden. Als Hauptmetabolit wurden sowohl von Daidzein als auch von Bisphenol A das jeweilige Glucuronid-Konjugat gebildet. Bei Daidzein überwog in der männlichen Ratte zusätzlich das Sulfat-Konjugat. Der Anteil an freier, d.h. unkonjugierter Verbindung betrug im Urin der Tiere zwischen 1 und 3 Prozent der Dosis. Außer den Phase II-Konjugaten, die aufgrund ihrer mangelnden östrogenen Wirksamkeit zu einer Detoxifizierung der beiden Verbindungen führte, konnten nach Gabe von Bisphenol A in der Ratte keine weiteren Metabolite identifiziert werden. Nach Exposition mit Daidzein konnten in den Faeces der Tiere in geringem Umfang die beiden reduktiven Metabolite Equol und O-DMA gefunden werden. Diese wurden wahrscheinlich im Magen-Darm-Trakt durch die Bakterien der Darmflora gebildet. Sowohl Daidzein als auch Bisphenol A wurden bei der Ratte nur unvollständig aus dem Magen-Darm-Trakt resorbiert; der Großteil der gegebenen Dosis wurde als unveränderte Substanz in den Faeces wiedergefunden. Bei Bisphenol A wurde die Ausscheidung zudem durch einen ausgeprägten enterohepatischen Kreislauf verzögert. Im zweiten Teil der Arbeit wurden zunächst empfindliche GC/MS- und HPLC-Methoden zur Quantifizierung der Verbindungen in humanen Plasma- und Urinproben entwickelt. Danach wurden freiwillige Probanden oral mit jeweils 5 mg Daidzein bzw. d16-Bisphenol A exponiert, um Daten zur Biotransformation und Toxikokinetik der beiden Substanzen im Mensch zu erhalten. Wegen des deutlich meßbaren Hintergrundes an Bisphenol A, das in allen Kontrollproben nachweisbar war, wurde für die Humanstudie die deuterierte Verbindung gegeben, für die kein störender Hintergrund meßbar war. Die Bioverfügbarkeit der Gesamt-Substanz (freie Verbindung + Konjugate) im Menschen war in beiden Fällen deutlich höher als in der Ratte. Von Daidzein wurden 40 Prozent (Ratte 10 Prozent), von Bisphenol A > 95 Prozent (Ratte 13 Prozent) der applizierten Dosis im Urin der Probanden wiedergefunden. Dabei zeigte sich ein sehr effizienter Phase II-Metabolismus; weniger als 1 Prozent der Glucuronid-Konjugatkonzentrationen wurden als unveränderte Substanz gefunden. Das Glucuronid stellte in beiden Fällen den einzigen nachweisbaren Metaboliten dar. Die Elimination von Daidzein und Bisphenol A verlief in den beiden Studien sehr schnell nach einer Kinetik erster Ordnung. Im Gegensatz zu der Ratte konnten auch bei Bisphenol A keine Auffälligkeiten in den Ausscheidungskurven beobachtet werden, Hinweise auf einen enterohepatischen Kreislauf im Menschen wurden nicht gefunden. Im Falle von Bisphenol A wurde fast die komplette applizierte Dosis (> 95 Prozent) in Form des Glucuronides im Urin wiedergefunden. Anhand der erhobenen Daten wurde anschließend eine Beurteilung des Risikos für den Menschen abgegeben.
Complement 1q/tumor necrosis factor-related proteins (CTRPs): structure, receptors and signaling
(2023)
Adiponectin and the other 15 members of the complement 1q (C1q)/tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-related protein (CTRP) family are secreted proteins composed of an N-terminal variable domain followed by a stalk region and a characteristic C-terminal trimerizing globular C1q (gC1q) domain originally identified in the subunits of the complement protein C1q. We performed a basic PubMed literature search for articles mentioning the various CTRPs or their receptors in the abstract or title. In this narrative review, we briefly summarize the biology of CTRPs and focus then on the structure, receptors and major signaling pathways of CTRPs. Analyses of CTRP knockout mice and CTRP transgenic mice gave overwhelming evidence for the relevance of the anti-inflammatory and insulin-sensitizing effects of CTRPs in autoimmune diseases, obesity, atherosclerosis and cardiac dysfunction. CTRPs form homo- and heterotypic trimers and oligomers which can have different activities. The receptors of some CTRPs are unknown and some receptors are redundantly targeted by several CTRPs. The way in which CTRPs activate their receptors to trigger downstream signaling pathways is largely unknown. CTRPs and their receptors are considered as promising therapeutic targets but their translational usage is still hampered by the limited knowledge of CTRP redundancy and CTRP signal transduction.
To enable a sustainable supply of chemicals, novel biotechnological solutions are required that replace the reliance on fossil resources. One potential solution is to utilize tailored biosynthetic modules for the metabolic conversion of CO2 or organic waste to chemicals and fuel by microorganisms. Currently, it is challenging to commercialize biotechnological processes for renewable chemical biomanufacturing because of a lack of highly active and specific biocatalysts. As experimental methods to engineer biocatalysts are time- and cost-intensive, it is important to establish efficient and reliable computational tools that can speed up the identification or optimization of selective, highly active, and stable enzyme variants for utilization in the biotechnological industry. Here, we review and suggest combinations of effective state-of-the-art software and online tools available for computational enzyme engineering pipelines to optimize metabolic pathways for the biosynthesis of renewable chemicals. Using examples relevant for biotechnology, we explain the underlying principles of enzyme engineering and design and illuminate future directions for automated optimization of biocatalysts for the assembly of synthetic metabolic pathways.
The intracellular pathogen Chlamydia is the causative agent of millions of new infections per year transmitting diseases like trachoma, pelvic inflammatory disease or lymphogranuloma venereum. Undetected or recurrent infections caused by chlamydial persistence are especially likely to provoke severe pathologies. To ensure host cell survival and to facilitate long term infections Chlamydia induces anti-apoptotic pathways, mainly at the level of mitochondria, and restrains activity of pro-apoptotic proteins. Additionally, the pathogen seizes host energy, carbohydrates, amino acids, lipids and nucleotides to facilitate propagation of bacterial progeny and growth of the chlamydial inclusion.
At the beginning of this study, Chlamydia-mediated apoptosis resistance to DNA damage induced by the topoisomerase inhibitor etoposide was investigated. In the course of this, a central cellular protein crucial for etoposide-mediated apoptosis, the tumour suppressor p53, was found to be downregulated during Chlamydia infections. Subsequently, different chlamydial strains and serovars were examined and p53 downregulation was ascertained to be a general feature during Chlamydia infections of human cells. Reduction of p53 protein level was established to be mediated by the PI3K-Akt signalling pathway, activation of the E3-ubiquitin ligase HDM2 and final degradation by the proteasome. Additionally, an intriguing discrepancy between infections of human and mouse cells was detected. Both activation of the PI3K-Akt pathway as well as degradation of p53 could not be observed in Chlamydia-infected mouse cells. Recently, production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and damage to host cell DNA was reported to occur during Chlamydia infection. Thus, degradation of p53 strongly contributes to the anti-apoptotic environment crucial for chlamydial infection.
To verify the importance of p53 degradation for chlamydial growth and development, p53 was stabilised and activated by the HDM2-inhibiting drug nutlin-3 and the DNA damage-inducing compound etoposide. Unexpectedly, chlamydial development was severely impaired and inclusion formation was defective. Completion of the chlamydial developmental cycle was prevented resulting in loss of infectivity. Intriguingly, removal of the p53 activating stimulus allowed formation of the bacterial inclusion and recovery of infectivity. A similar observation of growth recovery was made in infected cell lines deficient for p53.
As bacterial growth and inclusion formation was strongly delayed in the presence of activated p53, p53-mediated inhibitory regulation of cellular metabolism was suspected to contribute to chlamydial growth defects. To verify this, glycolytic and pentose phosphate pathways were analysed revealing the importance of a functioning PPP for chlamydial growth. In addition, increased expression of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase rescued chlamydial growth inhibition induced by activated p53. The rescuing effect was even more pronounced in p53-deficient cells treated with etoposide or nutlin-3 revealing additional p53-independent aspects of Chlamydia inhibition. Removal of ROS by anti-oxidant compounds was not sufficient to rescue chlamydial infectivity. Apparently, not only the anti-oxidant capacities of the PPP but also provision of precursors for nucleotide synthesis as well as contribution to DNA repair are important for successful chlamydial growth.
Modulation of host cell signalling was previously reported for a number of pathogens. As formation of ROS and DNA damage are likely to occur during infections of intracellular bacteria, several strategies to manipulate the host and to inhibit induction of apoptosis were invented. Downregulation of the tumour suppressor p53 is a crucial point during development of Chlamydia, ensuring both host cell survival and metabolic support conducive to chlamydial growth.
The pro-inflammatory phase of bone healing, initiated by platelet activation and eventually hematoma formation, impacts bone marrow mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) in unknown ways. Here, we created platelet-rich plasma (PRP) hydrogels to study how platelet-derived factors modulate functional properties of encapsulated MSCs in comparison to a non-inflammatory fibrin (FBR) hydrogel environment. MSCs were isolated from human bone marrow, while PRP was collected from pooled apheresis thrombocyte concentrates and used for hydrogel preparation. After their encapsulation in hydrogels for 72 h, retrieved MSCs were analyzed for immunomodulatory activities, apoptosis, stem cell properties, senescence, CD9\(^+\), CD63\(^+\) and CD81\(^+\) extracellular vesicle (EV) release, and metabolism-related changes. PRP-hydrogels stimulated immunosuppressive functions of MSCs, along with their upregulated susceptibility to cell death in communication with PBMCs and augmented caspase 3/7 activity. We found impaired clonal growth and cell cycle progression, and more pronounced β-galactosidase activity as well as accumulation of LC3-II-positive vacuoles in PRP-MSCs. Stimuli derived from PRP-hydrogels upregulated AKT and reduced mTOR phosphorylation in MSCs, which suggests an initiation of survival-related processes. Our results showed that PRP-hydrogels might represent a metabolically stressful environment, inducing acidification of MSCs, reducing polarization of the mitochondrial membrane and increasing lipid accumulation. These features were not detected in FBR-MSCs, which showed reduced CD63\(^+\) and CD81\(^+\) EV production and maintained clonogenicity. Our data revealed that PRP-derived hematoma components cause metabolic adaptation of MSCs followed by increased immune regulatory functions. For the first time, we showed that PRP stimuli represent a survival challenge and “apoptotic priming” that are detrimental for stem cell-like growth of MSCs and important for their therapeutic consideration.
Limiting dietary carbohydrates inhibits glioma growth in preclinical models. Therefore, the ERGO trial (NCT00575146) examined feasibility of a ketogenic diet in 20 patients with recurrent glioblastoma. Patients were put on a low-carbohydrate, ketogenic diet containing plant oils. Feasibility was the primary endpoint, secondary endpoints included the percentage of patients reaching urinary ketosis, progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival. The effects of a ketogenic diet alone or in combination with bevacizumab was also explored in an orthotopic U87MG glioblastoma model in nude mice. Three patients (15%) discontinued the diet for poor tolerability. No serious adverse events attributed to the diet were observed. Urine ketosis was achieved at least once in 12 of 13 (92%) evaluable patients. One patient achieved a minor response and two patients had stable disease after 6 weeks. Median PFS of all patients was 5 (range, 3-13) weeks, median survival from enrollment was 32 weeks. The trial allowed to continue the diet beyond progression. Six of 7 (86%) patients treated with bevacizumab and diet experienced an objective response, and median PFS on bevacizumab was 20.1 (range, 12-124) weeks, for a PFS at 6 months of 43%. In the mouse glioma model, ketogenic diet alone had no effect on median survival, but increased that of bevacizumab-treated mice from 52 to 58 days (p<0.05). In conclusion, a ketogenic diet is feasible and safe but probably has no significant clinical activity when used as single agent in recurrent glioma. Further clinical trials are necessary to clarify whether calorie restriction or the combination with other therapeutic modalities, such as radiotherapy or anti-angiogenic treatments, could enhance the efficacy of the ketogenic diet.
Background
Human African Trypanosomiasis (HAT) also called sleeping sickness is an infectious disease in humans caused by an extracellular protozoan parasite. The disease, if left untreated, results in 100% mortality. Currently available drugs are full of severe drawbacks and fail to escape the fast development of trypanosoma resistance. Due to similarities in cell metabolism between cancerous tumors and trypanosoma cells, some of the current registered drugs against HAT have also been tested in cancer chemotherapy. Here we demonstrate for the first time that the simple ester, ethyl pyruvate, comprises such properties.
Results
The current study covers the efficacy and corresponding target evaluation of ethyl pyruvate on T. brucei cell lines using a combination of biochemical techniques including cell proliferation assays, enzyme kinetics, phasecontrast microscopic video imaging and ex vivo toxicity tests. We have shown that ethyl pyruvate effectively kills trypanosomes most probably by net ATP depletion through inhibition of pyruvate kinase (Ki = 3.0\(\pm\)0.29 mM). The potential of ethyl pyruvate as a trypanocidal compound is also strengthened by its fast acting property, killing cells within three hours post exposure. This has been demonstrated using video imaging of live cells as well as concentration and time dependency experiments. Most importantly, ethyl pyruvate produces minimal side effects in human red cells and is known to easily cross the blood-brain-barrier. This makes it a promising candidate for effective treatment of the two clinical stages of sleeping sickness. Trypanosome drug-resistance tests indicate irreversible cell death and a low incidence of resistance development under experimental conditions.
Conclusion
Our results present ethyl pyruvate as a safe and fast acting trypanocidal compound and show that it inhibits the enzyme pyruvate kinase. Competitive inhibition of this enzyme was found to cause ATP depletion and cell death. Due to its ability to easily cross the blood-brain-barrier, ethyl pyruvate could be considered as new candidate agent to treat the hemo-lymphatic as well as neurological stages of sleeping sickness.
Das erste Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit war, ein Modell zu etablieren, mit dessen Hilfe Interaktionen zwischen Flavonoiden und Dickdarmbakterien schnell und zuverlaessig erfasst werden koennen, ohne hierzu aufwendige Humanstudien einzusetzen. Zu diesem Zweck wurde Schweine-Caecum eingesetzt; Mensch und Schwein weisen eine grosse Aehnlichkeit hinsichtlich der Anatomie und Physiologie des Gastrointestinaltraktes auf. In einer speziell entwickelten Anaerobenkammer erfolgte unter anoxischen Bedingungen die Inkubation von Modellverbindungen wie Quercetin (3,5,7,3',4'-Pentahydroxyflavon), ein hinsichtlich seiner Metabolisierung schon ausfuehrlich untersuchtes Flavonol, Chrysin (5,7-Dihydroxyflavon), Naringenin (5,7,4'-Trihydroxyflavanon) und Hesperetin (5,7,3'-Trihydroxy-4'-methoxyflavanon) mit dem Caecum-Inhalt. Die Identifizierung und Strukturaufklaerung der im Zeitraum von 24 h gebildeten Metabolite erfolgte mittels Hochleistungs-fluessigchromatographie-Diodenarray-Detektion (HPLC-DAD), HPLC-Elektrospray-Ionisierung-Tandemmassenspekrometrie (ESI-MS/MS) und Kapillargaschromatographie-Massenspektrometrie (HRGC-MS). Unter den gewaehlten experimentellen Bedingungen wandelte die Schweine-Caecum-Mikroflora Quercetin in Phloroglucin, 3,4-Dihydroxyphenylessigsaeure und 3,4-Dihydroxytoluol um. Das Flavon Chrysin wurde hingegen nicht abgebaut. Naringenin wurde zu 3-(4-Hydroxyphenyl)-propionsaeure und 3-Phenylpropionsaeure metabolisiert; aus Hesperetin entstanden via Eriodictyol Phloroglucin und 3-(3-Hydroxyphenyl)-propionsaeure. Der mittels HPLC-DAD-Analytik untersuchte zeitliche Verlauf des mikrobiellen Abbaus von Quercetin, Naringenin und Hesperetin zeigte einen langsamen Abbau von Naringenin im Gegensatz zur schnellen Metabolisierung von Quercetin und Hesperetin. Die erhaltenen Resultate stimmten mit Literaturergebnissen sehr gut ueberein und belegten somit die Anwendbarkeit von Schweine-Caecum als geeignetes ex-vivo-Modell zur Untersuchung des intestinalen Metabolismus von Flavonoiden. Mit dem entwickelten Modell wurde in weiteren Studien die Biotransformation ausgewaehlter Flavonoide im Dickdarm simuliert. Neben Ringspaltungen, Hydrolyse, Demethylierungs- und Dehydroxylierungsreaktionen entstanden bevorzugt aromatische Carbonsaeuren. So wurde beispielhaft das erstmals auf seine intestinale Metabolisierung untersuchte Hispidulin (5,7,4'-Trihydroxy-6-methoxyflavon) – ein hoch wirksamer Benzodiazepinrezeptor-Ligand – durch die Schweine-Caecum-Mikroflora rasch zu Scutellarein O-demethyliert, welches dann langsam zu 3-(4-Hydroxyphenyl)-propionsaeure weiter abgebaut wurde. Anhand der beobachteten Abbaukinetik ergab sich der Hinweis, dass Flavonoide in Abhaengigkeit von ihrem jeweiligen Substitutionsmuster unterschiedlich schnell von den Darmbakterien umgesetzt werden. Da auch Ausmass und Geschwindigkeit des Abbaus von Flavonoiden deren Bioverfuegbarkeit beeinflussen, war es ein weiteres Ziel dieser Arbeit zu ueberpruefen, inwieweit ein Zusammenhang zwischen Hydroxylierungsgrad des B-Ringes von Flavonoiden und deren mikrobiellen Abbaurate besteht. Hierzu wurden Flavonole, d.h. Galangin (3,5,7-Trihydroxyflavon), Kaempferol (3,5,7,4'-Tetrahydroxyflavon) und erneut Quercetin sowie Flavone, d.h. Chrysin, Apigenin (5,7,4'-Trihydroxyflavon) und Luteolin (5,7,3',4'-Tetrahydroxyflavon), die sich jeweils lediglich im Hydroxylierungsgrad des B-Ringes unterscheiden, ausgewaehlt und als Substrate (in jeweils gleicher Konzentration) fuer die Umsetzung durch Schweine-Caecum-Mikroflora gleicher Donoren eingesetzt. Der mikrobielle Abbau wurde ueber einen Zeitraum von 24 Stunden mittels HPLC-DAD-Analysen verfolgt. Ein Vergleich der mikrobiellen Umsetzungsraten der geprueften Flavonole und Flavone liess den Schluss zu, dass unabhaengig von der Flavonoid-Unterklasse eine Hydroxylierung in Position C-4' des B-Ringes den Abbau von Flavonoiden foerdert (bei den Flavonen sogar erst ermoeglicht) und dass eine zusaetzliche Hydroxylierung des B-Ringes keinerlei Einfluss auf den Abbau hat. Die Ergebnisse dieser Studie lassen weiterhin vermuten, dass die Hydroxylierung in Position C-3 des C-Ringes eine foerdernde Rolle im Abbau von Flavonoiden durch caecale Mikroflora spielt. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit erfolgten ferner Untersuchungen zur Interaktion von Flavonoiden mit alpha-Glucosidase aus Schweine-Caecum. Als potentielle Hemmstoffe kamen die Flavone Scutellarein, Baicalein und Luteolin zur Verwendung; als Substrate wurden p-Nitrophenyl-alpha-D-glucopyranosid und Saccharose eingesetzt. Fuer keines der eingesetzten Flavonoide war ein Einfluss auf die Aktivitaet der alpha-Glucosidase festzustellen. Diese Ergebnisse weisen auf strukturelle Unterschiede zwischen bakteriellen alpha-Glucosidasen und solchen aus dem Duenndarm der Saeugetiere hin, bei denen fuer u. a. Scutellarein und Baicalein hohe alpha-Glucosidase-Inhibitor-Aktivitaet beschrieben worden ist.