Wittrichmond8135
RANKL, either independently or synergistically with LPS, can regulate osteoclastogenesis, while LPS alone cannot. MicroRNA, IL-22, M1/M2 macrophages, and memory B cells have recently been shown to modulate osteoclastogenesis in periodontal diseases. CONCLUSION In this review, we summarize the mechanism of osteoclastogenesis accompanying periodontal diseases at the cellular level. We discuss a) the effects of LPS/TLR signaling and other cytokines on RANKL-dependent and -independent mechanisms involved in osteoclastogenesis; b) the recently identified role of several endogenous factors such as miRNA, IL-22, M1/M2 macrophages, and memory B cells in regulating osteoclastogenesis during periodontal pathogenesis. V.Williams syndrome (WS) is a rare neurodevelopmental disorder associated to a hemizygous deletion of 28 genes located on chromosome 7q11.23. WS affected subjects frequently suffer from several endocrine abnormalities including hypothyroidism due to defects in thyroid morphology. To date, several genes involved in thyroid dysgenesis have been identified, nonetheless, none of them is located in the 7q11.23 region. Thus, the hypothyroidism-linked molecular features in WS are not yet known. In this study we focused on one of the WS deleted gene, BAZ1B, demonstrating that its downregulation in thyroid cells leads to cell viability and survival decrement. Taking together, our results show that BAZ1B could be the mainly responsible for thyroid defects observed in some of WS patients and that these alterations are activated by PTEN-mediated mechanisms. Osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) is commonly caused by monoallelic mutations in COL1A1 or COL1A2. Biallelic mutations are extremely rare. Only five previous reports have identified seven OI patients with homozygous mutations in COL1A2. OI is a genetically and phenotypically heterogeneous disorder which challenges an establishment of genotype-phenotype correlation. Notably, more than thirty patients with OI possess the heterozygous mutation, p.Gly337Ser, in COL1A2. Their clinical severity ranges from mild OI type I to severe types III and IV. Here, we report a 17-year-old Thai female with recurrent bone fractures, short stature, blue sclerae, triangular face, missing teeth, dentinogenesis imperfecta (DI), skeletal deformities, and scoliosis. She was diagnosed with OI type III. Her parents were second-cousin-once-removed. The father was a professional Thai boxer. Both had normal bone mineral density, no history of bone fractures, and only teeth problems. They were diagnosed with DI without OI. Whole exome sequencing identified that the proband harbored the homozygous mutation, c.1009G > A (p.Gly337Ser), in exon 19 of COL1A2 while her parents were heterozygous for this mutation. This study reports the eighth child with OI and the homozygous mutation in COL1A2; and the first two individuals with the heterozygous p.Gly337Ser mutation in COL1A2 causing an isolated DI without OI. Osteoarthritis (OA) is a complicated degenerative disease that affects whole joint tissue. Currently, apart from surgical approaches to treat late stage OA, effective treatments to reverse OA are not available. Thus, the mechanisms leading to OA, and more effective approaches to treat OA should be investigated. According to available evidence, the PI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling pathway is essential for normal metabolism of joint tissues, but is also involved in development of OA. To provide a wide viewpoint to roles of PI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling pathway in osteoarthritis, a comprehensive literature search was performed using PubMed terms 'PI3K OR AKT OR mTOR' and 'osteoarthritis'. This review highlights the role of PI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling in cartilage degradation, subchondral bone dysfunction, and synovial inflammation, and discusses how this signaling pathway affects development of the disease. We also summarize recent evidences of therapeutic approaches to treat OA by targeting the PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway, and discuss potential challenges in developing these strategies for clinical treatment of OA. Aptamers which are promising and effective molecular probes, can deliver either fluorescent materials or radionuclides to tumors. This study aimed to develop a novel both fluorescent and radionuclide dual-modality probe based on a truncated aptamer and evaluate its stability and binding affinities in vitro. The aptamer JHIT2 with binding specifically to HepG2 cells was previously generated by Cell-SELEX. Using mfold and RNAstructure software to predict the secondary structure folded by a middle random sequence to truncate the primer sequences at both ends of the aptamer JHIT2 to yield the aptamer JHIT2e, with a similar secondary structure to JHIT2 and the same specificity and affinity as JHIT2. read more Attaching carboxyfluorescein (FAM) readily to the aptamer JHIT2e and then attaching iodine-131 to the FAM moiety which has multiple sites for iodine labeling to develop a novel both fluorescent and radionuclide dual-modality probe, termed 131I-FAM-JHIT2e. Cell uptake and fluorescence imaging assays in vitro confirmed that 131I-FAM-JHIT2e had both FAM fluorescence signal and radio-activity signal and maintained specific binding ability to the human hepatoma cell line HepG2. This work formed a basis for aptamer-based, dual-modality imaging probe that contains both fluorescent and radionuclide tags, which also is potential for theranostics. Structural data on membrane proteins in a lipid membrane environment is challenging to obtain but needed to provide information on the, often essential, protein-lipid interplay. A common experimental bottleneck in obtaining such data is providing samples in sufficient amounts and quality required for structural studies. We developed a new production protocol for the single-pass transmembrane protein (SPTMP) tissue factor (TF), exploiting the high expression level in E. coli inclusion bodies and subsequent refolding. This provided more than 5 mg of functional TF per liter bacterial culture. This is substantially more than what was obtained by the classical approaches for expressing TF in the membrane-anchored configuration. We optimized reconstitution into circularized nanodiscs enabling the formation of stable, TF loaded nanodiscs with different lipid compositions and with a limited material waste. The blood coagulation cascade is initiated by the complex formation between TF and Factor VIIa (FVIIa), and we probed this interaction by a functional assay and SPR measurements, which revealed similar activity and binding kinetics as TF produced by other protocols, demonstrating that high-yield production does not compromise TF function.