scholarly journals Long-Term Boron-Excess-Induced Alterations of Gene Profiles in Roots of Two Citrus Species Differing in Boron-Tolerance Revealed by cDNA-AFLP

2016 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peng Guo ◽  
Yi-Ping Qi ◽  
Lin-Tong Yang ◽  
Xin Ye ◽  
Jing-Hao Huang ◽  
...  
BMC Genomics ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Huan-Xin Jiang ◽  
Lin-Tong Yang ◽  
Yi-Ping Qi ◽  
Yi-Bin Lu ◽  
Zeng-Rong Huang ◽  
...  

Trees ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 28 (6) ◽  
pp. 1653-1666 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jing-Hao Huang ◽  
Zi-Jian Cai ◽  
Shou-Xing Wen ◽  
Peng Guo ◽  
Xin Ye ◽  
...  

Circulation ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 130 (suppl_2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Geoffrey de Couto ◽  
Hideaki Kanazawa ◽  
Eleni Tseliou ◽  
Linda Marbán ◽  
Eduardo Marbán

Introduction: Cardiosphere-derived cells (CDCs) confer both cardioprotection and regeneration in acute myocardial infarction (MI). However, only long-term (>3 wks) post-MI endpoints have been studied, making it impossible to investigate the cardioprotective effects in isolation. Macrophages (MF) concentrate within the heart following ischemic injury as part of the inflammatory response to injury. Here we test the hypothesis that CDCs are cardioprotective by modifying MF within the myocardium post-MI. Methods & Results: Wistar-Kyoto rats (aged 8-12 wks) underwent 45 min of ischemia followed by 20 min of reperfusion, then intracoronary (i.c.) infusion of either saline or CDCs (5x10 5 ). The use of a 48 hr endpoint enabled the selective study of cardioprotection. CDC-treated animals had preserved ejection fraction (59.2% vs. 47.4%; p<0.001) and reduced infarct size (TTC; 6.3% vs. 13.6%; p<0.01). The finding that CDC-treated hearts contained fewer CD68 + MF (p<0.05) suggested a mechanistic role for MF, a conjecture which we tested in detail. MF isolated from CDC-treated hearts secreted lower amounts of proinflammatory cytokines ( Nos2, Tnf, Il1b ; p<0.05). Systemic depletion of MF with clodronate liposomes attenuated the benefits of CDC therapy post-MI (p<0.05). In vitro , MF conditioned by transwell exposure to CDCs (M CDC ) exhibited distinct gene profiles relative to proinflammatory M 1 or “healing” M 2 polarization states (M CDC : Il10 ; M 1 : Nos2 ; M 2 : Arg1, Pparg ). Adoptive transfer of selective MF populations into the heart (i.c.; 20 min post-reflow) revealed that M CDC , but not M 1 or M 2 MF, could recapitulate the reduction in infarct size (M CDC : 4.5%; M 1 : 14.0%; M 2 : 10.8%; p<0.05). In vitro co-culture shows that M CDC selectively reduce cardiomyocyte apoptosis following oxidant stress (M CDC : 9.9%; M 1 : 39.4%; M 2 : 37.4%; p<0.001). Conclusions: CDCs are cardioprotective when administered 20 min after reflow; the timing distinguishes this form of cardioprotection from preconditioning or ischemic postconditioning. Various lines of evidence indicate that CDCs work by polarizing MF toward a cardioprotective phenotype. The findings motivate further translational development of the adjunctive use of CDCs post-MI to limit infarct size.


Biomedicines ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (10) ◽  
pp. 1446
Author(s):  
Ciniso Sylvester Shabangu ◽  
Phumelele Yvonne Siphepho ◽  
Chia-Yang Li ◽  
Wei-Chung Cheng ◽  
Ming-Ying Lu ◽  
...  

Background: A large amount of epidemiological evidence indicates that persistent HCV infection is the main risk factor for HCC. We aimed to study the effects of persistent HCV infection on the interaction of the virus and host cell to identify cancer gene profiles. Methods: Next-generation sequencing (NGS) was used to identify differentially expressed genes between uninfected Huh7.5.1 control cells, short-term HCV (S-HCV), early long-term HCV (eL-HCV), and long-term HCV (L-HCV) infections, which were analyzed using different dynamic bioinformatics and analytic tools. mRNA expression was validated and quantified using q-PCR. One hundred ninety-six serum samples of HCV patients with IFN/RBV treatment were used to study chemokine levels. Results: S-HCV activates an inflammatory response and drives cell death and apoptosis through cell cycle arrest via MAPK signaling. L-HCV promotes cell growth and alters cell adhesion and chemokine signaling via CXCL8-mediated-SRC regulation. A total of 196 serum samples from the HCV and HCV-HCC cohorts demonstrated significantly upregulated pro-inflammatory CXCL8 in non-SVR (persistent HCV infection) patients in the HCV-HCC group. Conclusions: Persistent infection with HCV induced pro-inflammatory CXCL8 and the oncogene SRC, thereby triggering and promoting hepatocarcinogenesis. CXCL8 may be a potential biomarker for monitoring HCV-related HCC progression.


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhangying Chen ◽  
Mecca Islam ◽  
Madeline Timken ◽  
Qinwen Mao ◽  
Booker Davis ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction: Traumatic brain injury (TBI) afflicts over 3 million Americans every year. Patients over 65 years of age suffer increased mortality as well as greater long-term neurocognitive and neuropsychiatric morbidity compared to younger adults. Microglia, the resident macrophages of the brain, are complicit in both. Our published and preliminary data have demonstrated a significant age-effect in which aged microglia are more prone to adopt a constitutively activated state associated with worse neurocognitive and neuropsychiatric outcomes. Therefore, we hypothesized that aged microglia would fail to return to a homeostatic state after TBI but instead adopt a long-term injury-associated state within the brain of aged mice as compared to young-adult mice after TBI. Methods: Young-adult (14-weeks) and aged (80-weeks) C57BL/6 mice underwent TBI via controlled cortical impact vs. sham injury. We utilized single-cell RNA sequencing to examine age-associated cellular responses after TBI. Four months post-TBI or sham injury, brains were harvested, and CD45+ cells (N=4,000 cells) were isolated via florescence-activated cell sorting. cDNA libraries were prepared via the 10x Genomics Chromium Single Cell 3' Reagent Kit, followed by sequencing on a HiSeq 4000 instrument. The raw data were processed using the Cell Ranger pipeline mapped to the mm10 mouse reference genome and Seurat following standard workflow. Seurat and GOrilla were used for downstream clustering, differential gene expression, and pathway analysis. All cell types were annotated using canonical markers and top expressed genes. ProjecTILs was additionally used to interpret T cell states. Results: Microglia from young-adult and aged mice have distinct transcriptional profiles pre-injury and markedly different transcriptional responses post-injury compared to young-adult mice. Pre-injury, aged mice demonstrated a disproportionate immune cell infiltration, including T cells, as compared to young-adult mice (aged versus young: 45.5% vs. 14.5%). Post-injury, the disparity was amplified with a proportional decrease in homeostatic microglia and greater increased infiltrating T cells compared to young-adult mice (Microglia: 27.5% vs. 71%; T cell: 45.5% vs. 4.5%). Of note, aged mice post-injury had a subpopulation of unique, age-specific, immune-inflammatory microglia resembling gene profiles of neurodegenerative disease-associated microglia (DAM) with enriched pathways involved in leukocyte recruitment and Alzheimer’s disease pathogenesis (FDR < 0.05). Contrastingly, post-injury, aged mice demonstrate a heterogenous T-cell infiltration with gene profiles corresponding to CD8 effector memory, CD8 native-like, CD4, and double-negative T cells (75.9%, 2.5%, 12.9%, and 8.6%, respectively) and enriched pathways including tau protein binding, macromolecule synthesis, and cytokine-mediated signaling pathways (FDR < 0.05). Conclusion: We hypothesized that aged microglia would fail to return to a homeostatic state after TBI and adopt a long-term, injury-associated state within the brain of aged mice as compared to young-adult mice after TBI. In particular, our data suggest an age-dependent reduction of homeostatic microglia post-injury yet an upregulation in a unique microglial subpopulation with a distinct immuno-inflammatory profile. Furthermore, aged subjects demonstrated a markedly disproportionate inflammatory infiltrate after TBI predominated by the presence of CD8+ T cells. In addition, post-injury, brain trauma reorganized the T cell milieu, especially CD8 effector memory T cells, via upregulating genes associated with macromolecule biosynthesis process and negative regulation of neuronal death, possibly linking TBI with its long-term sequelae and complications. Taken together, our data showed that age-specific gene signature changes in the T-cell infiltrates and the microglial subpopulation contributes to increased vulnerability of the aged brain to TBI. Age should be an a priori consideration in future TBI clinical trials.


2015 ◽  
Vol 123 ◽  
pp. 128-146 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wen Sang ◽  
Zeng-Rong Huang ◽  
Yi-Ping Qi ◽  
Lin-Tong Yang ◽  
Peng Guo ◽  
...  

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