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Moreover, stem cell properties of GC cells were also restrained by TRIM21. Our in vivo experiments showed that APA-repressed tumor growth was considerably abolished by TRIM21 knockdown, whereas being further elevated by TRIM21 over-expression. In addition, we showed that TRIM21 markedly decreased enhancer of zeste homolog 1 (EZH1) protein expression levels in GC cells, and importantly, a direct interaction between TRIM21 and EZH1 was verified. Of note, our in vitro studies revealed that EZH1 over-expression remarkably abolished the function of TRIM21 to restrain cell viability and induce apoptosis in APA-incubated GC cells, indicating that EZH1 suppression was necessary for TRIM21 to inhibit GC progression. Together, our findings demonstrated that TRIM21 may be a novel therapeutic target for GC treatment through reducing EZH1 to improve chemosensitivity.High temperature stress is an environmental factor that negatively affects the growth and development of crops. Hsp90 (90 kDa heat shock protein) is a major molecular chaperone in eukaryotic cells, contributing to the maintenance of cell homeostasis through interaction with co-chaperones. Aha1 (activator of Hsp90 ATPase) is well known as a co-chaperone that activates ATPase activity of Hsp90 in mammals. However, biochemical and physiological evidence relating to Aha has not yet been identified in plants. In this study, we investigated the heat-tolerance function of orchardgrass (Dactylis glomerata L.) Aha (DgAha). Recombinant DgAha interacted with cytosolic DgHsp90s and efficiently protected substrates from thermal denaturation. Furthermore, heterologous expression of DgAha in yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) cells and Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) plants conferred thermotolerance in vivo. Enhanced expression of DgAha in Arabidopsis stimulates the transcription of Hsp90 under heat stress. Our data demonstrate that plant Aha plays a positive role in heat stress tolerance via chaperone properties and/or activation of Hsp90 to protect substrate proteins in plants from thermal injury.Understanding the response of skin to superphysiological temperatures is critical to the diagnosis and prognosis of thermal injuries, and to the development of temperature-based medical therapeutics. Unfortunately, this understanding has been hindered by our incomplete knowledge about the nonlinear coupling between skin temperature and its mechanics. In Part I of this study we experimentally demonstrated a complex interdependence of time, temperature, direction, and load in skin's response to superphysiological temperatures. In Part II of our study, we test two different models of skin's thermo-mechanics to explain our observations. In both models we assume that skin's response to superphysiological temperatures is governed by the denaturation of its highly collageneous microstructure. Thus, we capture skin's native mechanics via a microstructurally-motivated strain energy function which includes probability distributions for collagen fiber orientation and waviness. In the first model, we capture skin's respo treatments. This work addresses a lack of theoretical and computational models of the coupled thermo-mechanics of skin. Our model accounts for skin microstructure through modeling the probability of fiber orientation and fiber stress-free states. Denaturing induces changes in the stress-free configuration of collagen, as well as changes in fiber stiffness and viscoelastic properties. We propose two competing models that fit all of our experimental observations. These models will enable future developments of thermal-therapeutics, prevention and management of skin thermal injuries, and set a foundation for improved mechanistic models of skin thermo-mechanics.Ykt6 has emerged as a key protein involved in a wide array of trafficking events, and has also been implicated in a number of human pathologies, including the progression of several cancers. It is a complex protein that simultaneously exhibits a high degree of structural and functional homology, and yet adopts differing roles in different cellular contexts. Because Ykt6 has been implicated in a variety of vesicle fusion events, we characterized the role of Ykt6 in oogenesis by observing the phenotype of Ykt6 germline clones. Immunofluorescence was used to visualize the expression of membrane proteins, organelles, and vesicular trafficking markers in mutant egg chambers. We find that Ykt6 germline clones have morphological and actin defects affecting both the nurse cells and oocyte, consistent with a role in regulating membrane growth during mid-oogenesis. Additionally, these egg chambers exhibit defects in bicoid and oskar RNA localization, and in the trafficking of Gurken during mid-to-late oogenesis. Finally, we show that Ykt6 mutations result in defects in late endosomal pathways, including endo- and exocytosis. These findings suggest a role for Ykt6 in endosome maturation and in the movement of membranes to and from the cell surface.Ghrelin, classically known as a central appetite-stimulating hormone, has recently been recognized to play an important role in peripheral tissue energy metabolism. In chicken, contrary to mammal, ghrelin acts as an anorexia signal, increased by fasting and further elevated after refed. In the present study, the effect of ghrelin on glucose/lipid utilization by peripheral tissues was investigated. Injection of exogenous acyl ghrelin reduced plasma triglyceride and glucose levels of chickens at both fasting and fed status. In the in vitro cultured chicken primary hepatocytes, adipocytes, and myoblasts, ghrelin suppressed glucose uptake, stimulated fatty acids uptake and oxidation, and decreased TG content. In hepatocyte, ghrelin increased the activities of LPL and HL, and upregulated the expression levels of gene ACC, CPT1, and PPARα. Ghrelin treatment markedly increased the protein level of p-ACC, PPARγ, PGC1α, and CPT1 in hepatocytes, adipocytes and myoblasts. Inhibition of AMPK activity by Compound C had no influence on glucose uptake by hepatocyte, adipocyte, and myoblast, but further amplified the stimulated fatty acid uptake of adipocyte by ghrelin. The present result demonstrates that ghrelin facilitates the uptake and oxidation of fatty acid and cut down the utilization of glucose by the liver, muscle, and adipose tissues. BIRB 796 molecular weight The result suggests that ghrelin functions as a signal of fatty acid oxidation. The study provides a vital framework for understanding the intrinsic role of ghrelin as a crucial factor in the concerted regulation of metabolic substrate of hepatocytes, adipocytes, and myoblasts.In addition to maintaining bile acid, cholesterol and glucose homeostasis, farnesoid X receptor (FXR) also regulates fatty acid β-oxidation (FAO). To explore the different roles of hepatic and intestinal FXR in liver FAO, FAO-associated metabolites, including acylcarnitines and fatty acids, and FXR target gene mRNAs were profiled using an integrated metabolomic and transcriptomic analysis in control (Fxrfl/fl), liver-specific Fxr-null (FxrΔHep) and intestine-specific Fxr-null (FxrΔIE) mice, treated either with the FXR agonist obeticholic acid (OCA) or vehicle (VEH). Activation of FXR by OCA treatment significantly increased fatty acyl-CoA hydrolysis (Acot1) and decreased FAO-associated mRNAs in Fxrfl/fl mice, resulting in reduced levels of total acylcarnitines and relative accumulation of long/medium chain acylcarnitines and fatty acids in liver. FxrΔHep mice responded to OCA treatment in a manner similar to Fxrfl/fl mice while FxrΔIE mice responded differently, thus illustrating that intestinal FXR plays a critical role in the regulation of hepatic FAO. A significant negative-correlation between intestinal FXR-FGF15 and hepatic CREB-PGC1A pathways was observed after both VEH and OCA treatment, suggesting that OCA-induced activation of the intestinal FXR-FGF15 axis downregulates hepatic PGC1α signaling via inactivation of hepatic CREB, thus repressing FAO. This mechanism was confirmed in experiments based on human recombinant FGF19 treatment and intestinal Fgf15-null mice. This study revealed an important role for the intestinal FXR-FGF15 pathway in hepatic FAO repression.Dispositional traits can be protective or contribute to increased vulnerability in individuals with chronic pain. This study aims to evaluate the association between two dispositional trait measures, affect balance style and multi-domain trait groups, with psychosocial measures, clinical pain, functional pain, and experimental pain at two years in individuals with chronic knee pain. The study is a prospective analysis of 168 community dwelling individuals aged 45 to 85 years old with knee pain with or at risk for knee osteoarthritis. At baseline, affect balance style and multi-domain trait groups were associated with psychosocial measures, clinical pain, and functional status. At the two-year time point, the multi-domain trait groups were associated with the clinical pain measures. Interestingly, individuals with previously demonstrated vulnerable traits showed more variability in dispositional trait status at the two-year time point compared to those with dispositional traits previously demonstrated as more protective. Findings reiterate that dispositional traits are predisposing but are not predetermining regarding pain-related experiences. PERSPECTIVE Vulnerable and protective dispositional traits are positively and negatively associated with clinical pain and functional limitations respectively. Although considered relatively stable, a 30-50% shift in dispositional traits was indicated over a two-year period. Findings highlight that dispositional trait are modifiable and thus, predisposing but not predetermining for persisting chronic pain.This systematic review and meta-analysis investigated the effectiveness of physical activity (PA) and sedentary behavior (SB) interventions on PA and SB levels in people with persistent musculoskeletal pain. We explored the effectiveness of behavior change techniques (BCTs), the use of behavior change theory and non-PA/SB outcomes. Randomized controlled trials of PA or SB interventions for people with persistent musculoskeletal pain were eligible. Twenty-three studies were included. Quality of evidence was assessed using the GRADE approach. Meta-analysis demonstrated a small effect for PA post-intervention (Hedge's g = .321, CI .136-.507, P = .001, very low-quality evidence). There was no effect for longer-term follow-up PA (low quality evidence) or SB outcomes (very low-quality evidence). There was a small effect for studies with low risk-of-bias at longer-term follow-up PA. Self-report PA outcomes, PA and education interventions, non-self-selected PA, a combination of supervised and unsupervised PA and a corventions on physical activity post-intervention but not at longer-term follow-up or on sedentary behavior at any time-point, however quality of evidence is low to very low.Opioids are not universally effective for treating neuropathic pain following spinal cord injury (SCI), a finding that we previously demonstrated in a rat model of SCI. The aim of this study was to determine analgesic response of morphine-responsive and nonresponsive SCI rats to adjunct treatment with dopamine modulators and to establish if the animal groups expressed distinct metabolomic profiles. Thermal thresholds were tested in female Long Evans rats (N = 45) prior to contusion SCI, after SCI and following injection of morphine, morphine combined with dopamine modulators, or dopamine modulators alone. Spinal cord and striatum samples were processed for metabolomics and targeted mass spectrometry. Morphine provided analgesia in 1 of 3 of SCI animals. All animals showed improved analgesia with morphine + pramipexole (D3 receptor agonist). Only morphine nonresponsive animals showed improved analgesia with the addition of SCH 39166 (D1 receptor antagonist). Metabolomic analysis identified 3 distinct clusters related to the tyrosine pathway that corresponded to uninjured, SCI morphine-responsive and SCI morphine-nonresponsive groups.

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