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Publication
Journal: Leukemia Research
December/20/2010
Abstract
Since 2002, date of publication of the previous Italian Society of Haematology (SIE) practice guidelines for management of myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), novel disease-modifying treatments have been introduced and the SIE commissioned an update. After a comprehensive review of the medical literature published since January 2001, the Expert Panel formulated recommendations for the management of adult and paediatric MDS, graded according to the available evidence. The major updates are: first-line hypomethylating agents in patients with INT2-high-risk disease; controlled use of first-line lenalidomide in low-INT1 risk transfusion-dependent patients with 5q deletion; deferasirox in low-INT1 patients with a relevant transfusional load; first-line high-dose ESA in low-INT1 patients with Hb <10 g/dl and endogenous EPO <500 U/l; allogeneic HSCT first-line therapy for INT2- and high-risk patients <65 years without severe co morbidities.
Publication
Journal: Bone
September/11/2000
Abstract
Hip geometry and bone mineral density (BMD) have been shown previously to relate, independently of each other, to risk of hip fracture. We used Lunar DPX "beta" versions of hip strength analysis (HSA) and hip axis length (HAL) software to analyze scans from ten representative age-stratified population samples in the European Prospective Osteoporosis Study (EPOS). All 1617 subjects were >50 years of age, and 1033 were women. The data were modeled with gender and center as categorical variables. The bone mineral density of the upper half of the femoral neck declined at a faster rate with age than that in the lower half. Femoral neck cross-sectional moment of inertia (CSMI), a measure of resistance to bending, showed no significant age reduction in either gender. However, height and weight effects on CSMI were significantly more beneficial in men than in women (0.002 < p < 0.012) and the weight effect appeared to be mediated by bone mineral content (BMC). Compressive stress (Cstress), defined as the stress in the femoral neck at its weakest cross section arising from a standardized fall, was higher in women. Although Cstress increased with body weight when BMC was held constant, in practice it fell through the association and statistical interaction of rising body weight with rising BMC. HAL, as expected, was strongly positively associated with male gender and also height (p < 0.0001). Hip strength-related indices were markedly center-dependent. Significant differences (p < 0.0001) were noted between the centers for all the variables investigated that related to hip geometry. Adjustment for femoral neck bone mineral content (totBMC) showed these center differences to account for >50% of center variation in hip strength, which remained highly significant (p < 0.0001). We conclude that there are substantial geographical differences in femoral neck geometry as well as in BMD. These geometric variations may contribute to the large variations in hip fracture risk across Europe. The effects of aging on hip strength need to be explored in longitudinal studies.
Publication
Journal: Stroke
September/21/2010
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
Erythropoietin (EPO), a hematopoietic cytokine, exerts neuroprotective effects in experimental stroke. In the present study, we investigated the effect of recombinant human EPO (rhEPO) in combination with tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) on embolic stroke.
METHODS
Rats subjected to embolic middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) were treated with rhEPO (5000 U/kg) in combination with tPA (10 mg/kg) at 2 or 6 hours after MCAO. Control groups consisted of ischemic rats treated with rhEPO (5000 U/kg) alone, tPA (10 mg/kg) alone, or saline at 2 or 6 hours after MCAO.
RESULTS
The combination therapy of rhEPO and tPA initiated 6 hours after MCAO did not reduce the ischemic lesion volume and significantly (P<0.05) increased the incidence of brain hemorrhage measured by frequency of gross hemorrhage and a quantitative spectrophotometric hemoglobin assay compared with rats treated with rhEPO alone and tPA alone. However, when the combination therapy was initiated 2 hours after MCAO, the treatment significantly (P<0.05) reduced the lesion volume and did not substantially increase the incidence of hemorrhagic transformation compared with saline-treated rats. Immunostaining analysis revealed that the combination therapy of rhEPO and tPA at 6 hours significantly (P<0.05) increased matrix metalloproteinase-9, NF-kappaB, and interleukin-1 receptor-associated kinase-1 immunoreactive cerebral vessels compared with rats treated with rhEPO alone and saline.
CONCLUSIONS
EPO exacerbates tPA-induced brain hemorrhage without reduction of ischemic brain damage when administered 6 hours after stroke in a rat model of embolic MCAO and that matrix metalloproteinase-9, NF-kappaB, and interleukin-1 receptor-associated kinase-1 upregulated by the delayed combination therapy may contribute to augmentation of brain hemorrhage.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Biological Chemistry
December/27/2012
Abstract
Proper N- and O-glycosylation of recombinant proteins is important for their biological function. Although the N-glycan processing pathway of different expression hosts has been successfully modified in the past, comparatively little attention has been paid to the generation of customized O-linked glycans. Plants are attractive hosts for engineering of O-glycosylation steps, as they contain no endogenous glycosyltransferases that perform mammalian-type Ser/Thr glycosylation and could interfere with the production of defined O-glycans. Here, we produced mucin-type O-GalNAc and core 1 O-linked glycan structures on recombinant human erythropoietin fused to an IgG heavy chain fragment (EPO-Fc) by transient expression in Nicotiana benthamiana plants. Furthermore, for the generation of sialylated core 1 structures constructs encoding human polypeptide:N-acetylgalactosaminyltransferase 2, Drosophila melanogaster core 1 β1,3-galactosyltransferase, human α2,3-sialyltransferase, and Mus musculus α2,6-sialyltransferase were transiently co-expressed in N. benthamiana together with EPO-Fc and the machinery for sialylation of N-glycans. The formation of significant amounts of mono- and disialylated O-linked glycans was confirmed by liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry. Analysis of the three EPO glycopeptides carrying N-glycans revealed the presence of biantennary structures with terminal sialic acid residues. Our data demonstrate that N. benthamiana plants are amenable to engineering of the O-glycosylation pathway and can produce well defined human-type O- and N-linked glycans on recombinant therapeutics.
Publication
Journal: American Journal of Physiology - Heart and Circulatory Physiology
April/8/2009
Abstract
Anemia is common in patients with chronic heart failure and an independent predictor of poor prognosis. Chronic anemia leads to left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy and heart failure, but its molecular mechanisms remain largely unknown. We investigated the mechanisms, including the molecular signaling pathway, of cardiac remodeling induced by iron deficiency anemia (IDA). Weanling Sprague-Dawley rats were fed an iron-deficient diet for 20 wk to induce IDA, and the molecular mechanisms of cardiac remodeling were evaluated. The iron-deficient diet initially induced severe anemia, which resulted in LV hypertrophy and dilation with preserved systolic function associated with increased serum erythropoietin (Epo) concentration. Cardiac STAT3 phosphorylation and VEGF gene expression increased by 12 wk of IDA, causing angiogenesis in the heart. Thereafter, sustained IDA induced upregulation of cardiac hypoxia inducible factor-1alpha gene expression and maintained upregulation of cardiac VEGF gene expression and cardiac angiogenesis; however, sustained IDA promoted cardiac fibrosis and lung congestion, with decreased serum Epo concentration and cardiac STAT3 phosphorylation after 20 wk of IDA compared with 12 wk. Upregulation of serum Epo concentration and cardiac STAT3 phosphorylation is associated with a beneficial adaptive mechanism of anemia-induced cardiac hypertrophy, and later decreased levels of these molecules may be critical for the transition from adaptive cardiac hypertrophy to cardiac dysfunction in long-term anemia. Understanding the mechanism of cardiac maladaptation to anemia may lead to a new strategy for treatment of chronic heart failure with anemia.
Publication
Journal: Oncogene
April/14/2002
Abstract
The mammalian forkhead transcription factors, FOXO3a (FKHRL1), FOXO1a (FKHR) and FOXO4 (AFX) are negatively regulated by PKB/Akt kinase. In the present study we examined the engagement of forkhead family of transcription factors in erythropoietin (Epo)- and stem cell factor (SCF)-mediated signal transduction. Our data show that all three forkhead family members, FOXO3a, FOXO1a and FOXO4 are phosphorylated in human primary erythroid progenitors. Experiments performed to determine various upstream signaling pathways contributing to phosphorylation of forkhead family members show that only PI-3-kinase pathway is required for inactivation of FOXO3a. Our data also demonstrate that during Epo deprivation FOXO3a interacts with the transcriptional coactivator p300 and such interaction is disrupted by stimulation of cells with Epo. To determine the domains in FOXO3a, mediating its interaction with p300, we performed GST pull-down assays and found that the N-terminus region containing the first 52 amino acids was sufficient for binding p300. Finally, our data demonstrate that FOXO3a and FOXO1a are acetylated during growth factor deprivation and such acetylation is reversed by stimulation with Epo. Thus mammalian forkhead transcription factors are involved in Epo and SCF signaling in primary erythroid progenitors and may play a role in the induction of apoptotic and mitogenic signals.
Publication
Journal: Stroke
September/21/2009
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
Erythropoietin (EPO) was explored regarding its suitability as a candidate stroke drug in animal experimental studies. We performed a meta-analysis to obtain an overall impression of the efficacy of EPO in published animal experimental stroke studies and for potential guidance of future clinical studies.
METHODS
By electronic and manual searches of the literature, we identified studies describing the efficacy of EPO in experimental focal cerebral ischemia. Data on study quality, EPO dose, time of administration, and outcome measured as infarct volume or functional deficit were extracted. Data from all studies were pooled by means of a meta-analysis.
RESULTS
Sixteen studies were included in the meta-analysis. When administered after the onset of ischemia, EPO and its analogues reduced infarct size by 32% and improved neurobehavioral deficits significantly. A meta-regression suggests higher doses of EPO to be associated with smaller infarct volumes. When administered earlier than 6 hours EPO was more effective compared to a later treatment initiation. Both hematopoietic and nonhematopoietic EPO analogues showed efficacy in experimental stroke.
CONCLUSIONS
In conclusion, this analysis further strengthens confidence in the efficacy of EPO and its analogues in stroke therapy. Nonhematopoietic EPO analogues which are known to have less systemic adverse effects compared to EPO are also promising candidate stroke drugs. Further experimental studies are required that evaluate the safety of a combination of EPO with thrombolysis and whether EPO is also effective in animals with comorbidity.
Publication
Journal: Journal of the American College of Cardiology
July/27/2006
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
We investigated the effects of erythropoietin (EPO) on neovascularization and cardiac function after myocardial infarction (MI).
BACKGROUND
Erythropoietin exerts antiapoptotic effects and mobilizes endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs).
METHODS
We intravenously administered EPO (1,000 IU/kg) immediately [EPO(0) group], 6 h [EPO(6h) group], or 1 week [EPO(1wk) group] after the permanent ligation of the coronary artery in dogs. Control animals received saline immediately after the ligation.
RESULTS
The infarct size 6 h after MI was significantly smaller in the EPO(0) group than in the control group (61.5 +/- 6.0% vs. 22.9 +/- 2.2%). One week after MI, the circulating CD34-positive mononuclear cell numbers in both the EPO(0) and the EPO(6h) groups were significantly higher than in the control group. In the ischemic region, the capillary density and myocardial blood flow 4 weeks after MI was significantly higher in both the EPO(0) and the EPO(6h) groups than in the control group. Four weeks after MI, left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction in the EPO(6h) (48.6 +/- 1.9%) group was significantly higher than that in either the control (41.9 +/- 0.9%) or the EPO(1wk) (42.6 +/- 1.2%) group but significantly lower than that in the EPO(0) group (56.1 +/- 2.3%). The LV end-diastolic pressure 4 weeks after MI in both the EPO(0) and the EPO(6h) groups was significantly lower than either the control or the EPO(1wk) group. Hematologic parameters did not differ among the groups.
CONCLUSIONS
In addition to its acute infarct size-limiting effect, EPO enhances neovascularization, likely via EPC mobilization, and improves cardiac dysfunction in the chronic phase, although it has time-window limitations.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology
June/13/2005
Abstract
Erythropoietin (EPO) is a hormone known to stimulate hematopoiesis. However, recent research suggests additional properties of EPO, such as protection against ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury in various tissues. We studied the effect of timing of EPO administration on cardioprotection during I/R in the heart. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were subjected to 45 minutes of coronary occlusion, followed by 24 hours of reperfusion. Animals were randomized to receive saline or single dose of EPO (5,000 IU/kg) either 2 hours before I/R, at the start of ischemia, or after the onset of reperfusion. The ratio of infarct area/area at risk (planimetry), left ventricular (LV) function (pressure development), and apoptosis (number of active caspase-3 positive cells) were determined after 24-hour reperfusion. Administration of EPO during different time points resulted in a 19 to 23% (P < 0.05) reduction in the infarct area/area at risk, which was accompanied by a trend toward better LV hemodynamic parameters. Apoptosis was significantly attenuated in groups treated with EPO at the start of ischemia (29% reduction) and after the onset of reperfusion (38%), and to a lesser extent (16%) in the group pre-treated with EPO. Thus, in vivo administration of EPO at different time points protects the myocardial structure and preserves cardiac function during I/R. Cardioprotective effect of EPO is associated with inhibition of apoptosis.
Publication
Journal: Glycobiology
August/2/1992
Abstract
Erythropoietin (EPO) is a haemopoietic hormone specific to cells of erythroid lineage. EPO has recently become available for the treatment of anaemia as the first human recombinant biomedicine produced in heterologous mammalian cells. Human EPO is characterized by its large carbohydrate chains, which occupy close to 40% of its total mass. These sugar moieties were thought to be important for the biological activity of EPO, but detailed studies were not performed until the structures were elucidated. The variety of roles for the sugar chains were then immediately found once the structures were known. EPO is an excellent model for investigating the roles of sugar chains on glycoproteins, since its gene and its multiple glycoforms are available, as well as sensitive bioassays for testing. In this review, we will first summarize the known sugar chain structures of EPO from different host cells, and then discuss the host-cell dependent and peptide structure-dependent glycosylation of glycoproteins. We will then address how one investigates the roles of sugar chains of glycoproteins, show several examples of such investigations, and discuss the functional roles of HuEPO's sugar chains in its biosynthesis and secretion, its in vitro and in vivo biological activities, and its half-life in blood circulation.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology
June/20/2007
Abstract
Cellular mechanisms conferring neuroprotection in the brains of patients with Alzheimer disease (AD) remain incompletely understood. Erythropoietin (Epo) and the erythropoietin receptor (EpoR) are expressed in neural tissues and protect against oxidative and other stressors in various models of brain injury and disease. Our objective in this study was to determine whether EpoR is upregulated in the brains of persons with sporadic AD and mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Postmortem hippocampus and temporal cortex from subjects with AD, MCI, and no cognitive impairment (NCI) were procured from the Religious Orders Study. Total immunoreactive EpoR protein was determined by Western blotting. Astrocytes expressing immunoreactive EpoR were quantified in 4 temporal and 6 hippocampal regions, and correlated with clinical, neuropsychologic, and neuropathologic indices. Total immunoreactive EpoR protein was markedly increased in AD and MCI temporal cortex versus NCI tissues. Composite measures of glial EpoR expression in temporal cortex layers I to IV were significantly greater in the MCI group compared with the NCI and AD groups. Hippocampal EpoR scores were increased in persons with MCI and AD relative to those with NCI. There was substantial subregional heterogeneity in disease-related EpoR expression patterns in AD and MCI temporal cortex and hippocampus. There was no association of EpoR-positive astrocytes with summary measures of global cognition or AD pathology. We conclude that upregulation of EpoR in temporal cortical and hippocampal astrocytes is an early, potentially neuroprotective, event in the pathogenesis of sporadic AD.
Publication
Journal: Small
March/5/2014
Abstract
Eosinophil peroxidase (EPO) is one of the major oxidant-producing enzymes during inflammatory states in the human lung. The degradation of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) upon incubation with human EPO and H₂O₂ is reported. Biodegradation of SWCNTs is higher in the presence of NaBr, but neither EPO alone nor H₂O₂ alone caused the degradation of nanotubes. Molecular modeling reveals two binding sites for SWCNTs on EPO, one located at the proximal side (same side as the catalytic site) and the other on the distal side of EPO. The oxidized groups on SWCNTs in both cases are stabilized by electrostatic interactions with positively charged residues. Biodegradation of SWCNTs can also be executed in an ex vivo culture system using primary murine eosinophils stimulated to undergo degranulation. Biodegradation is proven by a range of methods including transmission electron microscopy, UV-visible-NIR spectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy, and confocal Raman imaging. Thus, human EPO (in vitro) and ex vivo activated eosinophils mediate biodegradation of SWCNTs: an observation that is relevant to pulmonary responses to these materials.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Applied Physiology
June/16/2008
Abstract
We studied the effect of hyperbaric oxygen (HBO) preconditioning on the molecular mechanisms of neuroprotection in a rat focal cerebral ischemic model. Seventy-two male Sprague-Dawley rats were pretreated with HBO (100% O(2), 2 atmospheres absolute, 1 h once every other day for 5 sessions) or with room air. In experiment 1, HBO-preconditioned rats and matched room air controls were subjected to focal cerebral ischemia or sham surgery. Postinjury motor parameters and infarction volumes of HBO-preconditioned rats were compared with those of controls. In experiment 2, HBO-preconditioned rats and matched room air controls were killed at different time points. Brain levels of hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha (HIF-1alpha) and its downstream target gene erythropoietin (EPO) analyzed by Western blotting and RT-PCR as well as HIF-1alpha DNA-binding and transcriptional activities were determined in the ipsilateral hemisphere. HBO induced a marked increase in the protein expressions of HIF-1alpha and EPO and the activity of HIF-1alpha, as well as the expression of EPO mRNA. HBO preconditioning dramatically improved the neurobehavioral outcome at all time points (3.0 +/- 2.1 vs. 5.6 +/- 1.5 at 4 h, 5.0 +/- 1.8 vs. 8.8 +/- 1.4 at 8 h, 6.4 +/- 1.8 vs. 9.7 +/- 1.3 at 24 h; P < 0.01, respectively) and reduced infarction volumes (20.7 +/- 4.5 vs. 12.5 +/- 3.6%, 2,3,5-Triphenyltetrazolium chloride staining) after cerebral ischemia. This observation indicates that the neuroprotection induced by HBO preconditioning may be mediated by an upregulation of HIF-1alpha and its target gene EPO.
Publication
Journal: Gastroenterology
August/15/2002
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
Treatment of chronic hepatitis C with interferon (IFN)-alpha often has hematotoxic effects. We evaluated the effects of acute vs. chronic and standard vs. pegylated IFN-alpha on hematopoiesis.
METHODS
We studied hematopoiesis in 46 patients with chronic hepatitis C receiving single high-dose IN-Falpha2b followed by daily dose standard or weekly pegylated IFN before combination antiviral therapy.
RESULTS
Single high-dose therapy resulted in a significant drop in hemoglobin (HB), leukocytes, and platelet count. Although platelets, stimulated by a significant increase in thrombopoietin (TPO), and leukocytes recovered quickly, HB remained below baseline for 7 days. Daily standard or weekly pegylated IFN-alpha leads to a more pronounced drop in all 3 lineages with concomitant increases in TPO and erythropoietin (EPO). No difference was observed between standard and pegylated IFN, except for HB, which fell more during pegylated IFN therapy. Consecutive combination antiviral therapy aggravated the anemia but not the drop in leukocytes or thrombocytes.
CONCLUSIONS
The drop in all 3 hematopoietic lineages through IFN-alpha treatment, high-dose standard, standard daily dose, or pegylated, is caused by a combination of bone marrow inhibition and probably some other rapid acting mechanisms. Hematopoietic growth factors are increased as a consequence but cannot overcome the bone marrow suppression.
Publication
Journal: Neoplasia
September/14/2005
Abstract
Erythropoietin (Epo) is used for managing anemia in cancer patients. However, recent studies have raised concerns for this practice. We investigated the expression and function of Epo and the erythropoietin receptor (EpoR) in tumor biopsies and cell lines from human head and neck cancer. Epo responsiveness of the cell lines was assessed by Epoetin-alpha-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of the Janus kinase 2 (JAK2) protein kinase. Transmigration assays across Matrigel-coated filters were used to examine the effects of Epoetin-alpha on cell invasiveness. In 32 biopsies, we observed a significant association between disease progression and expression of Epo and its receptor, EpoR. Expression was highest in malignant cells, particularly within hypoxic and infiltrating tumor regions. Although both Epo and EpoR were expressed in human head and neck carcinoma cell lines, only EpoR was upregulated by hypoxia. Epoetin-alpha treatment induced prominent JAK2 phosphorylation and enhanced cell invasion. Inhibition of JAK2 phosphorylation reduced both basal and Epo-induced invasiveness. Our findings support a role for autocrine or paracrine Epo signaling in the malignant progression and local invasiveness of head and neck cancer. This mechanism may also be activated by recombinant Epo therapy and could potentially produce detrimental effects in rhEpo-treated cancer patients.
Publication
Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
April/6/1997
Abstract
Production of mature erythrocytes requires multiple growth factors, but we do not know how their actions are coordinated. Here we show that erythroid progenitors from erythropoietin receptor (Epo-R)-/- fetal livers, infected in vitro with a retrovirus expressing the wild-type Epo-R, require addition of both Epo and stem cell factor (SCF) to form colony-forming unit erythroid (CFU-E) colonies. Thus, a functional interaction between KIT and the Epo-R, similar to what we reported in cultured cells, is essential for the function of CFU-E progenitors. In contrast, CFU-E colony formation in vitro by normal fetal liver progenitors requires only Epo; the essential interaction between activated KIT and the Epo-R must have occurred in vivo before or at the CFU-E progenitor stage. Using truncated dominant-negative mutant Epo-Rs, we show that KIT does not activate the Epo-R by inducing its dimerization, but presumably does so by phosphorylating tyrosine residue(s) in its cytosolic domain. By expressing mutant Epo-Rs containing only one of eight cytosolic tyrosines, we show that either tyrosine residue Y464 or Y479 suffices for Epo-dependent cell proliferation. However, only Epo-R F7Y479 is capable of supporting erythroid colony formation when expressed in (Epo-R)-/- fetal liver cells, indicating that Y464 either cannot send a differentiation signal or fails to respond to SCF/KIT activation. This work employs a novel experimental system to study the function of growth factors and their receptors in normal hematopoiesis.
Publication
Journal: Endocrinology
July/9/1985
Abstract
The carbohydrate composition of human erythropoietin (epo) was determined by micro-GLC. Enzymic removal of most of the sugars results in aggregation of glycosidase-treated epo, loss of biological activity when assayed in mice, and retention of activity when assayed in marrow cell cultures or by RIA. Endoglycosidase F causes the removal of most of the carbohydrates indicating that the oligosaccharides are asparagine linked. The lack of O-linked sugar is confirmed by the absence of N-acetylgalactosamine. These findings indicate that the oligosaccharide portion of epo, although required for action in vivo, is not required for interaction with the target cells of the blood-forming system.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Neurochemistry
April/5/2006
Abstract
This study was designed to investigate the neuroprotective effect of intrinsic and extrinsic erythropoietin (EPO) against hypoxia/ischemia, and determine the optimal time-window with respect to the EPO-induced neuroprotection. Experiments were conducted using primary mixed neuronal/astrocytic cultures and neuron-rich cultures. Hypoxia (2%) induces hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha (HIF-1alpha) activity followed by strong EPO expression in mixed cultures and weak expression in neuron-rich cultures as documented by both western blot and RT-PCR. Immunoreactive EPO was strongly detected in astrocytes, whereas EPOR was only detected in neurons. Neurons were significantly damaged in neuron-rich cultures but were distinctly rescued in mixed cultures. Application of recombinant human EPO (rhEPO) (0.1 U/mL) within 6 h before or after hypoxia significantly increased neuronal survival compared with no rhEPO treatment. Application of rhEPO after onset of reoxygenation achieved the maximal neuronal protection against ischemia/reperfusion injury (6 h hypoxia followed 24 h reoxygenation). Our results indicate that HIF-1alpha induces EPO gene released by astrocytes and acts as an essential mediator of neuroprotection, prove the protective role of intrinsic astrocytic-neuronal signaling pathway in hypoxic/ischemic injury and demonstrate an optimal therapeutic time-window of extrinsic rhEPO in ischemia/reperfusion injury in vitro. The results point to the potential beneficial effects of HIF-1alpha and EPO for the possible treatment of stroke.
Publication
Journal: World Psychiatry
July/13/2011
Abstract
This paper provides the rationale and design of the European Prediction of Psychosis Study (EPOS), the first European prospective transnational field study of the prodrome and moderating risk/resilience factors of psychosis. As different health systems provide different structures of care, prevention programmes will only be successfully implemented and sustained system-wide, if they can be adapted to the system's special opportunities and needs. EPOS will provide a sound data base for a future evidence-based prevention of psychosis. Data on the recruitment of subjects and on the distribution of the four clinical criteria for an at-risk mental state for psychosis are given.
Publication
Journal: Molecular Medicine
September/3/2012
Abstract
Tissue injury, hypoxia and significant metabolic stress activate innate immune responses driven by tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α and other proinflammatory cytokines that typically increase damage surrounding a lesion. In a compensatory protective response, erythropoietin (EPO) is synthesized in surrounding tissues, which subsequently triggers antiinflammatory and antiapoptotic processes that delimit injury and promote repair. What we refer to as the sequelae of injury or disease are often the consequences of this intentionally discoordinated, primitive system that uses a "scorched earth" strategy to rid the invader at the expense of a serious lesion. The EPO-mediated tissue-protective system depends on receptor expression that is upregulated by inflammation and hypoxia in a distinctive temporal and spatial pattern. The tissue-protective receptor (TPR) is generally not expressed by normal tissues but becomes functional immediately after injury. In contrast to robust and early receptor expression within the immediate injury site, EPO production is delayed, transient and relatively weak. The functional EPO receptor that attenuates tissue injury is distinct from the hematopoietic receptor responsible for erythropoiesis. On the basis of current evidence, the TPR is composed of the β common receptor subunit (CD131) in combination with the same EPO receptor subunit that is involved in erythropoiesis. Additional receptors, including that for the vascular endothelial growth factor, also appear to be a component of the TPR in some tissues, for example, the endothelium. The discoordination of the EPO response system and its relative weakness provide a window of opportunity to intervene with the exogenous ligand. Recently, molecules were designed that preferentially activate only the TPR and thus avoid the potential adverse consequences of activating the hematopoietic receptor. On administration, these agents successfully substitute for a relative deficiency of EPO production in damaged tissues in multiple animal models of disease and may pave the way to effective treatment of a wide variety of insults that cause tissue injury, leading to profoundly expanded lesions and attendant, irreversible sequelae.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics
February/11/1988
Abstract
The results of functional treatment using the Pavlik harness in congenital dislocation and congenital dysplasia of the hip in children aged less than 11 months were examined by an EPOS study group. This study was conducted on 3,611 hips in 2,636 patients for a period of 1-9 years after treatment. The reduction rate was 92% in grade Tonnis 2 and 3; the healing rate was 80%. In children with dysplastic hips, the healing rate was 95.35%. Avascular necrosis of the femoral head was observed in 2.38%. The Pavlik harness is designed for outpatient treatment if the parents are compliant.
Publication
Journal: Biochimica et Biophysica Acta - General Subjects
August/16/2010
Abstract
Recombinant human erythropoietin (rhEPO) has been used clinically to alleviate cancer- and chemotherapy-related anemia. However, recent clinical trials have reported that rhEPO also may adversely impact disease progression and survival. The expression of functional EPO receptors (EPOR) has been demonstrated in many human cancer cells where, at least in vitro, rhEPO can stimulate cell growth and survival and may induce resistance to selected therapies. Responses to rhEPO measured by alterations in tumor cell growth or survival, activation of signaling pathways or modulation of sensitivity to anticancer agents are variable. Both methodological and inherent biological issues underlie the differential cell responses, including reported difficulties in EPOR protein detection, potential involvement of EPOR isoforms or of cytoplasmic EPOR, possible differential structure and/or binding affinities of hematopoietic versus non-hematopoietic cell EPOR, possible aberrant regulation of EPOR activity, and a functional EPO/EPOR autocrine/paracrine loop. The modulation by rhEPO of tumor cell response to anticancer agents is coincident with modulation of multiple signaling pathways, BCL-2 family proteins, caspases and NFkB. The molecular interplay of pro-survival and pro-death signals, triggered by EPO and/or by anticancer agents, is multifactorial and tightly coordinated. Expression microarray analysis may prove critical for deciphering this potentially novel network and its broad spectrum of genes and proteins.
Publication
Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
September/7/1998
Abstract
A new class of 16-membered macrolides, the epothilones (Epos), has been synthesized and evaluated for antitumor potential in vitro and in vivo. Recent studies in these and other laboratories showed that epothilones and paclitaxel (paclitaxel) share similar mechanisms of action in stabilizing microtubule arrays as indicated by binding-displacement studies, substitution for paclitaxel in paclitaxel-dependent cell growth, and electron microscopic examinations. The present study examined cell growth-inhibitory effects in two rodent and three human tumor cell lines and their drug-resistant sublines. Although paclitaxel showed as much as 1, 970-fold cross-resistance to the sublines resistant to paclitaxel, adriamycin, vinblastine, or actinomycin D, most epothilones exhibit little or no cross-resistance. In multidrug-resistant CCRF-CEM/VBL100 cells, IC50 values for EpoA (1), EpoB (2), desoxyEpoA (3) (dEpoA), desoxyEpoB (4) (dEpoB), and paclitaxel were 0.02, 0.002, 0.012, 0.017, and 4.14 microM, respectively. In vivo studies, using i.p. administration, indicated that the parent, EpoB, was highly toxic to mice and showed little therapeutic effect when compared with a lead compound, dEpoB. More significantly, dEpoB (25-40 mg/kg, Q2Dx5, i.p.) showed far superior therapeutic effects and lower toxicity than paclitaxel, doxorubicin, camptothecin, or vinblastine (at maximal tolerated doses) in parallel experiments. For mammary adenocarcinoma xenografts resistant to adriamycin, MCF-7/Adr, superior therapeutic effects were obtained with dEpoB compared with paclitaxel when i.p. regimens were used. For ovarian adenocarcinoma xenografts, SK-OV-3, dEpoB (i.p.), and paclitaxel (i. v.) gave similar therapeutic effects. In nude mice bearing a human mammary carcinoma xenograft (MX-1), marked tumor regression and cures were obtained with dEpoB.
Publication
Journal: European Journal of Clinical Pharmacology
May/29/2006
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
Erythropoietin (EPO) was originally described as a regulator of erythropoiesis. Recently, synthesis of EPO and expression of the EPO receptor (EPO-R) have been reported for the central nervous system (CNS). The potential use of EPO to prevent or reduce CNS injury and the paucity of information regarding its entry into the human CNS led us to examine the pharmacokinetics (PK) of recombinant human EPO (r-HuEPO) in the serum and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF).
METHODS
Four patients with Ommaya reservoirs were enrolled to facilitate serial CSF sampling. R-HuEPO was given intravenously (IV) in single doses of 40,000 IU or 1,500 IU/kg and in multiple doses of 40,000 IU daily for 3 days.
RESULTS
The EPO concentrations in the CSF increased after a period of slow equilibration. Linear first-order distribution kinetics were observed for serum and CSF. The concentration of EPO in the CSF was proportional to the serum concentration of EPO and the permeability of the blood-brain barrier (BBB), as determined by the albumin quotient (QA=[albumin] CSF/[albumin] serum). A rise in the CSF concentration was seen as early as 3 h after IV administration. Peak levels (C(max)) were reached between 9 h and 24 h. After a single dose of 1,500 IU/kg, the Cmax in the CSF ranged from 11 mIU/ml to 40 mIU/ml, and the ratios of CSF/serum Cmax ranged from 3.6x10-4 to 10.2x10-4. The terminal half-life (t1/2) values of EPO in serum and CSF were similar. The t(1/2) of r-HuEPO in the CSF ranged from 25.6 h to 35.5 h after a single dose of 1,500 IU/l. Using these parameters a PK model was generated that predicts the concentration-time profile of EPO in the CSF.
CONCLUSIONS
We report that r-HuEPO can cross the human BBB and describe for the first time the PK of EPO in the CSF after IV administration. Our data suggest that the concentration-time profile of EPO in the CSF can be predicted for individual patients if the serum concentration of EPO and the Q(A) are known. This information may be useful in the design of clinical trials to explore the potential therapeutic effects of EPO during CNS injury.
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