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Publication
Journal: Journal of Experimental Medicine
June/11/1985
Abstract
The role of gamma interferon (IFN-gamma) in T cell-replacing factor (TRF) activity for antigen-specific plaque-forming cell (PFC) responses in vitro was studied using antibodies to murine IFN-gamma (Mu IFN-gamma). TRF activity was present in supernatants (Sn) of Con A- or mixed leukocyte reaction-stimulated murine spleen cells as well as in an IL-2-rich fraction of phytohemagglutinin-stimulated human peripheral blood lymphocyte Sn and in the Sn of the Gibbon T lymphoma MLA-144. The human TRF was highly active with cells from nu/nu mice and normal mice but not with cells from animals with the xid immunologic defect, similar to the activity of murine TRF. Antibodies to IFN-gamma consisted of hyper-immune rabbit antisera, IFN-gamma affinity-purified rabbit immunoglobulin and an interspecies hybridoma specific for Mu IFN-gamma. The results show that the activities of all preparations of TRF are markedly diminished or abrogated by antibody to Mu IFN-gamma but not by antibodies to human IFN-gamma (Hu IFN-gamma), nor by normal rabbit sera or purified rabbit Ig. The degree of inhibition was dose dependent and was quantitatively reversed by the addition to the cultures of recombinant-derived Mu IFN-gamma (Mu rIFN-gamma) but not Hu rIFN-gamma. This reversal was fully antigen specific and thus not attributable to polyclonal B cell activation by IFN-gamma, which is inactive alone in the TRF assay. Kinetic analysis shows that IFN-gamma must act by 24-48 h to produce PFC responses at 4 d. Together, the data demonstrate that IFN-gamma is a necessary mediator for TRF effects and that IFN-gamma is induced by TRF from T-depleted murine spleen cells in sufficient quantity to support large antibody responses. The source of this IFN-gamma may be the potent natural killer cells that are induced in cultures stimulated with TRF.
Publication
Journal: Applied and Environmental Microbiology
June/21/2011
Abstract
Sand bedding material is frequently used in dairy operations to reduce the occurrence of mastitis and enhance cow comfort. One objective of this work was to determine if sand-based bedding also supported the microbiologically based suppression of an introduced bacterial pathogen. Bedding samples were collected in summer, fall, and winter from various locations within a dairy operation and tested for their ability to suppress introduced populations of Escherichia coli O157:H7. All sources of bedding displayed a heat-sensitive suppressiveness to the pathogen. Differences in suppressiveness were also noted between different samples at room temperature. At just 1 day postinoculation (dpi), the recycled sand bedding catalyzed up to a 1,000-fold reduction in E. coli counts, typically 10-fold greater than the reduction achieved with other substrates, depending on the sampling date. All bedding substrates were able to reduce E. coli populations by over 10,000-fold within 7 to 15 dpi, regardless of sampling date. Terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) analysis was used to identify bacterial populations potentially associated with the noted suppression of E. coli O157:H7 in sand bedding. Eleven terminal restriction fragments (TRFs) were overrepresented in paired comparisons of suppressive and nonsuppressive specimens at multiple sampling points, indicating that they may represent environmentally stable populations of pathogen-suppressing bacteria. Cloning and sequencing of these TRFs indicated that they represent a diverse subset of bacteria, belonging to the Cytophaga-Flexibacter-Bacteroidetes, Gammaproteobacteria, and Firmicutes, only a few of which have previously been identified in livestock manure. Such data indicate that microbial suppression may be harnessed to develop new options for mitigating the risk and dispersal of zoonotic bacterial pathogens on dairy farms.
Publication
Journal: British Journal of Cancer
October/3/2001
Abstract
Telomerase adds hexameric repeats of 5'-TTAGGG-3' termed telomeres to ends of chromosomal DNA. This enzyme has been implicated in cellular immortalization and cellular senescence. Recently, a number of relevant genes have been cloned, including these encoding three major components of human telomerase: human telomerase RNA component (hTR), human telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT), and telomerase-associated protein-1 (TEP1). Also important are genes encoding human telomeric-repeat binding factor protein (<em>TRF</em>) 1 and 2. To clarify mechanisms regulating telomerase activity, we studied telomerase activity, the telomeric restriction fragment (<em>TRF</em>) length and gene expression of these telomerase components and the telomeric-repeat binding factor proteins in sequential observation following X-irradiation of cultured pancreatic cancer cells. We previously reported that PANC-1 cells are better able to tolerate thermal stress, antineoplastic drugs, and exposure to tumour necrosis factor than MIAPaCa-2 cells. MIAPaCa-2 and PANC-1 cells were exposed to X-irradiation, their telomerase activity was increased at 2 days and then decreased gradually. Of the three telomerase components, only hTERT mRNA expression showed parallel changes. <em>TRF</em> length was stable just before and after X-irradiation. Among binding factor proteins, <em>TRF</em>1 mRNA showed reciprocal changes possibly directed toward maintaining a stable telomere length. In this study, our results demonstrate that not only hTERT but also <em>TRF</em>1 are important regulator of telomerase activity.
Publication
Journal: Hormones
February/25/1991
Publication
Journal: Clinical Chemistry
October/20/1999
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Detection of telomere repeats by Southern hybridization of genomic DNA is time consuming, and the reading of a mean terminal restriction fragment (TRF) length from a smear pattern of an autoradiogram can be inaccurate. We developed a hybridization protection assay (HPA) for telomere repeats.
METHODS
We heated 5 microL of DNA solution or 10 microL of cell or tissue lysate at 95 degrees C for 5 min, mixed it with 100 microL of hybridization solution containing 3 x 10(6) relative light units of acridinium ester-labeled probe, and incubated the mixture for 20 min at 60 degrees C. We then added 300 microL of selection buffer and incubated the mixture for 10 min at 60 degrees C to differentially hydrolyze unhybridized probe. Chemiluminescence was measured for 2 s per tube.
RESULTS
The amount of telomere repeats was assayed by HPA within linearity from 10 to 3000 ng of purified genomic DNA or from 1000 to 100 000 cell equivalents of lysate. To normalize the amount of DNA in lysate, the amount of Alu sequence was measured by HPA. A ratio of telomere to Alu (TA ratio) = 0.01 corresponded to approximately 2 kbp of mean TRF length determined by Southern blotting in cultured fibroblast and colorectal tissue samples. The TA ratio decreased from 0.06 to 0.02 with increasing division age from 30 to 90 population doubling levels of cultured human fetal fibroblasts. The assay required approximately 45 min from collection of cell or tissue samples.
CONCLUSIONS
The amount of telomere repeats was quantitatively measured by HPA in 10 ng of sheared genomic DNA or in the lysate of 1000 cells. This method is simple, rapid, quantitative, sensitive, and applicable to the measurement of telomere repeats in clinical samples such as needle biopsy specimen or as few as 1000 cells in body fluid or washings.
Publication
Journal: AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses
September/21/1999
Abstract
To study CD4+ T cell productivity during HIV-1 infection, CD4+ T cell telomere lengths were measured. Cross-sectional and longitudinal analysis of HIV-1-infected individuals with CD4+ T cells counts >300 cells/mm3 showed normal average telomeric restriction fragment (TRF) length and normal shortening rates of CD45RA+ naive and CD45RO+ memory CD4+ T cells. These TRF data were interpreted in terms of CD4+ T cell production by means of a mathematical model. This model resolves previous criticisms arguing that the normal TRF length of CD4+ T cells in HIV-1 clinical latency is due to the killing of dividing CD4+ T cells by the virus. Only an increased priming rate of naive CD4+ T cells to become memory cells may elongate the average TRF length of memory CD4+ T cells, and may therefore mask the shortening effect of increased turnover in the CD4+ memory T cell compartment. The data are more compatible with the notion that during HIV-1 clinical latency the turnover of CD4+ T cells is not markedly increased, however, and that HIV-related interference with renewal from progenitors plays a role in CD4+ T cell depletion. In such a "limited renewal" scenario disease progression is no longer a consequence of markedly increased CD4+ T cell production.
Publication
Journal: Physiology and Behavior
March/22/1992
Abstract
The free-running circadian rhythms of five behavioral functions of the rabbit were masked by unsignalled restricted food access (RF). The rhythms were reorganized immediately, a large part of events being assembled around the end of food availability. In addition to masking a slower process of entrainment was running: a component of anticipatory activity (AA) was established 1-3 h before food access. AA consolidated in continuation of the camouflaged free-running rhythm. The time of AA establishment correlated significantly with the phase angle difference (PAD) between free-running rhythm and RF: it decreased with decreasing positive PAD. With the consolidation of AA, the rhythms had attained a stable phase relation to RF. At the termination of RF, the circadian rhythms started to free-run again, the phase being dependent from that of the preceding RF schedule. The period length of the RF zeitgeber (TRF) had some impact on tau of the circadian rhythm. This aftereffect was most evident after termination of TRF less than 24 h: the free-running rhythm continued for up to 49 days with a tau less than 24 h and turned longer thereafter. The results demonstrate the entrainment of circadian rhythms of the rabbit by RF in addition to masking.
Authors
Publication
Journal: Neuroscience
January/4/2009
Abstract
Feeding schedules that limit food availability to a set time of day are powerful synchronizers of the rhythms of expression of the circadian clock protein Period 2 (PER2) in the limbic forebrain in rats. Little is known, however, about the mechanisms that mediate the effect of such timed restricted feeding (TRF) schedules on the expression of PER2. Adrenal glucocorticoids have been implicated in the circadian regulation of clock genes expression in peripheral tissues as well as in the control of the rhythms of expression of PER2 in certain limbic forebrain regions, such as the oval nucleus of the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNSTov) and central nucleus of the amygdala (CEA) in rats. To study the possible involvement of glucocorticoids in the regulation of PER2 expression by TRF, we assessed the effect of adrenalectomy on TRF-entrained PER2 rhythms in the limbic forebrain in rats. Adrenalectomy selectively abolished the rhythms of PER2 in the BNSTov and CEA in normally fed rats, as previously shown, but had no effect on TRF-entrained PER2 rhythms in the same structures. These findings show that the effect of TRF on PER2 rhythms in the limbic forebrain is independent of adrenal glucocorticoids and demonstrate that the involvement of glucocorticoids in the regulation PER2 rhythms in the limbic forebrain is not only region specific, as previously shown, but also state dependent.
Publication
Journal: American Journal of Clinical Pathology
November/26/1985
Abstract
One hundred random lymphocytes in each of 168 buffy coat preparations from 59 subjects at risk for AIDS (50 homosexuals, 7 hemophiliacs, and 2 combined, all with T4:T8 ratios of less than or equal to 1.2) were screened for the presence of ultrastructural markers, "tubuloreticular structures" (TRS), and "test tube and ring-shaped forms" (TRF). Twenty-six (44%) of the subjects were TRS positive (71 specimens) and 12 (20%) were TRS/TRF positive (34 specimens). TRF were only observed in TRS-positive specimens. There was an inverse relationship between the incidence and abundance of markers and the T4:T8 ratios, i.e., mean T4:T8 +/- SE for TRS-negative, TRS-positive, and TRS/TRF-positive subjects were 0.59 +/- 0.05, 0.42 +/- 0.05, and 0.19 +/- 0.06, respectively. Markers were present for as long as 16 months before AIDS was diagnosed in four subjects and before the appearance of features suggestive of AIDS in two others. The assessment of TEM markers in peripheral blood lymphocytes is a simple method for screening at-risk subjects in whom AIDS is likely to develop.
Publication
Journal: Psychological Medicine
March/5/1992
Abstract
This study investigated the stability and change in teacher-reported problem behaviours across a four-year period. An epidemiological sample of 811 children aged 4-12 at the initial assessment was assessed twice with the Achenbach Teacher Report Form (TRF). We found medium stability in the level of TRF total problem scores. Highest stability was found for aggressive and other externalizing behaviours. Stability was higher for girls than for boys. Of the girls who could be regarded as disturbed at base line, 50% could still be so regarded four years later, whereas only 23% of the boys could be considered persistently disturbed across the study interval. Girls' scores on the Externalizing syndrome were especially stable.
Publication
Journal: Genomics
September/21/1992
Abstract
We have mapped five human chromosome 21 (HSA 21) markers in marsupials and a monotreme, two major groups of mammals that diverged from eutherians 130-150 and 150-170 million years before present (MYrBP), respectively. We have found that these genes map to two distinct autosomal sites, one containing SOD1/CBR/BCEI and the other containing ETS2/INFAR, in the marsupials Macropus eugenii and Sminthopsis macroura (which belong to orders that diverged 40-80 MYrBP), as well as in the monotreme Ornithorhynchus anatinus (the platypus). Since marsupials and monotremes diverged independently from eutherians, these data suggest that HSA 21 genes were originally located in two separate autosomal blocks. In another Sminthopsis species, SOD1 is linked to TRF (a marker on HSA 3q), suggesting that the ancestral SOD1/CBR/BCEI region also included HSA 3 markers. We suggest that these blocks became fused early in the eutherian evolution to form a HSA 3/21 chromosome, which has remained intact in artiodactyls, but has been independently disrupted in both the primate and rodent lineages.
Publication
Journal: Lipids
June/29/2015
Abstract
Little is known about the effect of vitamin E on brain function. Therefore, in this study we evaluated the effect of tocotrienol rich fraction (TRF) on behavioral impairment and oxidative stress in aged rats. Thirty-six male Wistar rats (young: 3-months-old; aged: 21-months-old) were treated with either the control (olive oil) or TRF (200 mg/kg) for 3 months. Behavioral studies were performed using the open field test and Morris water maze (MWM) task. Blood was taken for assessment of DNA damage, plasma malondialdehyde (MDA) and vitamin E, and erythrocyte antioxidant enzyme activity. Brains were also collected to measure vitamin E levels. Results showed that aged rats exhibited reduced exploratory activity, enhanced anxiety and decreased spatial learning and memory compared with young rats. DNA damage and plasma MDA were increased, and vitamin E levels in plasma and brain were reduced in aged rats. Aged rats supplemented with TRF showed a markedly reduced level of anxiety, improved spatial learning and memory, reduced amount and severity of DNA damage, a reduced level of MDA, and increased levels of antioxidant enzyme activity and plasma/brain vitamin E compared with age-matched controls. In conclusion, TRF supplementation reverses spatial learning and memory decline and decreases oxidative stress in aged rats.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Physiology and Biochemistry
February/16/2014
Abstract
Oxidative stress contributes to cardiovascular diseases. We aimed to study the effects of palm tocotrienol-rich fraction (TRF) on plasma homocysteine and cardiac oxidative stress in rats fed with a high-methionine diet. Forty-two male Wistar rats were divided into six groups. The first group was the control. Groups 2-6 were fed 1% methionine diet for 10 weeks. From week 6 onward, folate (8 mg/kg diet) or palm TRF (30, 60 and 150 mg/kg diet) was added into the diet of groups 3, 4, 5 and 6. The rats were then killed. Palm TRF at 150 mg/kg and folate supplementation prevented the increase in plasma total homocysteine (4.14 ± 0.33 and 4.30 ± 0.26 vs 5.49 ± 0.25 mmol/L, p < 0.05) induced by a high-methionine diet. The increased heart thiobarbituric acid reactive substance in rats fed with high-methionine diet was also prevented by the supplementations of palm TRF (60 and 150 mg/kg) and folate. The high-methionine group had a lower glutathione peroxidase activity (49 ± 3 vs 69 ± 4 pmol/mg protein/min) than the control group. This reduction was reversed by palm TRF at 60 and 150 mg/kg diet (p < 0.05), but not by folate. Catalase and superoxide dismutase activities were unaffected by both methionine and vitamin supplementations. In conclusion, palm TRF was comparable to folate in reducing high-methionine diet-induced hyperhomocysteinemia and oxidative stress in the rats' hearts. However, palm TRF was more effective than folate in preserving the heart glutathione peroxidase enzyme activity.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Theoretical Biology
May/28/1998
Abstract
Southern blot analysis of terminal restriction fragments (TRFs) is the standard method for quantitative examination of telomere length distributions. Since TRFs contain a subtelomeric component, central parameters of the TRF distribution n(L) such as the arithmetic mean (M) or the median (Me) cannot be derived directly from Southern blot data, i.e. from the optical density distribution OD(L). Several estimates have been applied instead; the seeming arithmetic mean A, the "center of mass" C, and the positions of maximal (P) and half-maximal optical density (P(1/2)). We show that C> A> M for any non-truncated distributions n(L), and P> M> P1/2 for any symmetrical unimodal n(L). Symmetric appearance on a Southern blot, however, suggests positive skewness of n(L). Thus, a lognormal form of n(L) may be considered. Then, C> A> M> P=Me> P(1/2). Alternatively, a Weibull distribution may be assumed. The latter is compatible with negative feedback-regulation of the telomere lengths. Using the maximum likelihood method we compare these distributions with FISH-data on telomere lengths in different cell types. The fit of the lognormal distribution is clearly superior. Lognormal genesis may relate to telomere breakage and recombination. Truncation of the upper end of the TRF distribution is possible due to Southern blot artifacts. Thereby, the order of the estimates may change to P> C> A. Having minimal sensitivity to truncation, P seems to be the optimal choice. however, the variability of P is high since peakedness of OD(L) and DNA length resolution are inversely related.
Authors
Publication
Journal: Mutation Research - Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis
August/18/2008
Abstract
The aim of this study was to investigate if consumption of ordinary carbohydrate-rich food prepared in different ways has an impact on chromosome stability, i.e., on the formation of micronucleated young erythrocytes in humans. Twenty-four persons, divided into two groups, participated during 4 days in a semi-controlled food-consumption study. One group (low-heated-food-group, LowHF-group) consumed only food boiled in water (max 100 degrees C) and the other group (high-heated-food-group, HighHF-group) consumed preferentially strongly heated (fried) food. From each of the subjects, blood samples were drawn, before and after 4 days. The frequency (f) of micronucleated (MN) very young erythrocytes (transferrin-positive reticulocytes, Trf-Ret), fMNTrf-Ret, was determined, and the difference in the frequency, before and after the eating period, was calculated. The obtained mean differences for the two groups were compared. As an indicator of highly heated food the acrylamide (AA) content in part of the consumed foodstuffs was analysed by use of LC/MS-MS and the AA intake estimated. In the blood samples the hemoglobin-adduct levels from AA were analysed as a measure of the internal AA dose. The differences between the mean fMNTrf-Ret, before and after the eating period, were -0.15 per thousand for the LowHF-group and +0.17 per thousand for the HighHF-group, p<0.005 (t-test, one-tailed). The mean total AA intake in the HighHF-group during 4 days was estimated to about 3000+/-450microg per person. For the LowHF-group, the mean AA intake was low, 20+/-10microg per person. The lowest dose of AA that caused a significant increase of micronucleated erythrocytes in mice is more than a hundred times higher than the AA level in this study. Thus, it is unlikely that the exposure to AA is the major cause behind the observed difference. The answer is probably to be found in other compounds produced at the same time during heating of the food.
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Publication
Journal: British Journal of Clinical Psychology
September/2/2008
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To assess the occurrence of a wide range of behavioural, emotional, and post-traumatic stress problems in children and adolescents, long term after septic shock caused by Neisseria meningitidis (MSS).
METHODS
This study included 6- to 17-year-old patients who survived MSS and were admitted to the PICU of the Medical Centre between 1988 and 2001. To assess behavioural, emotional, and post-traumatic stress problems, the Child Behaviour Checklist (CBCL), the Teacher's Report Form (TRF), and the Youth Self-Report (YSR) were used.
METHODS
Parents of 89 MSS children, aged 6-17 years, completed the CBCL. Teachers of 65 same-aged MSS children completed the TRF, and 45 11- to 17-year-old MSS children completed the YSR. These data were compared with those from the normative reference groups.
RESULTS
Overall, the proportions of MSS children scoring in the deviant range for problem behaviour were comparable to the proportions in the reference groups, according to parents', teachers', and self-reports. As to the level of emotional and behavioural problems, mothers of the MSS children reported more somatic complaints regarding their children in comparison with the reference groups. Severity of illness was not a significant predictor of behavioural, emotional, and post-traumatic stress problems. Age at the time of illness was a significant predictor of behavioural, emotional, and post-traumatic stress problems in MSS children, indicating that the younger the child at the time of illness, the more problems were reported by parents at follow-up.
CONCLUSIONS
Overall, the results showed long-term behavioural, emotional, and post-traumatic stress outcomes for MSS children, which were comparable to those in the general population.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Clinical Psychology
July/7/2008
Abstract
The psychometric properties of four teacher report measures and their utility for accurate diagnosis of pediatric bipolar spectrum disorders (BPSDs) were examined. Participants were 191 youth (65% male; 62% African-American; 23% diagnosed with a BPSD), age 5-18 (M=10.16, SD=3.27) years, 70% recruited from a community mental health center and 30% recruited from a mood disorders clinic. Teachers "who knew the child best" were asked to complete the Achenbach Teacher Report Form (TRF) as well as teacher versions of the General Behavior Inventory (T-GBI), the Child Mania Rating Scale (CMRS-T), and the Young Mania Rating Scale (T-YMRS). Teacher response rates and missing data varied significantly depending on the age of the child. Exploratory factor analysis identified stable and interpretable factors; however, receiver operating characteristic (ROC) and logistic regression analyses showed that teacher report measures were not able to discriminate BPSD cases from non-BPSD cases, or from attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) cases. Teacher report appears to be insufficiently specific or sensitive to BPSD for clinical diagnostic use, although teacher scales might have research utility.
Publication
Journal: Sensors
September/9/2012
Abstract
Salmonella enterica is a major food-borne pathogen of world-wide concern. Sensitive and rapid detection methods to assess product safety before retail distribution are highly desirable. Since Salmonella is most commonly associated with poultry products, an evanescent wave fiber-optic assay was developed to detect Salmonella in shell egg and chicken breast and data were compared with a time-resolved fluorescence (TRF) assay. Anti-Salmonella polyclonal antibody was immobilized onto the surface of an optical fiber using biotin-avidin interactions to capture Salmonella. Alexa Fluor 647-conjugated antibody (MAb 2F-11) was used as the reporter. Detection occurred when an evanescent wave from a laser (635 nm) excited the Alexa Fluor and the fluorescence was measured by a laser-spectrofluorometer at 710 nm. The biosensor was specific for Salmonella and the limit of detection was established to be 10(3) cfu/mL in pure culture and 10(4) cfu/mL with egg and chicken breast samples when spiked with 10(2) cfu/mL after 2-6 h of enrichment. The results indicate that the performance of the fiber-optic sensor is comparable to TRF, and can be completed in less than 8 h, providing an alternative to the current detection methods.
Publication
Journal: Anticancer Research
August/16/2000
Abstract
This study was performed to evaluate the prognostic significance of alteration in telomere length in pathological stage (p-stage) I-IIIA non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Paired cancer and normal lung tissues were obtained from 72 patients with histologically confirmed p-stage I-IIIA NSCLC. Terminal restriction fragment (TRF) length, which indicates telomere length, was measured by Southern blot analysis. Tumor telomerase activity was also assayed by non-radioactive PCR-ELISA in 55 patients. TRF length (mean +/- SD) in normal tissue was 6.2 +/- 1.1 Kb. Therefore, upper and lower limits of normal range in TRF length was set at 8.4 (mean + 2SD) Kb and 4.0 (mean-2SD) Kb, respectively. A tumor showing TRF length over normal range was defined as positive for the alteration. In 72 patients, 25 (34.7%) with alteration in TRF length had significantly shorter survival durations than those of the others. Telomerase activity did not correlate with survival duration. In multivariate analysis, alteration in TRF length (P = 0.0033) was second to p-stage (P = 0.0004) in importance among the various parameters.
Publication
Journal: European Journal of Cardio-thoracic Surgery
November/14/2004
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To establish a new model for analyzing the correlation between the terminal restriction fragment (TRF) length and telomerase activity in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients due to inconsistent results in previous reports.
METHODS
Between January 1999 and December 1999, 79 NSCLC patients were studied. The activity of telomerase was measured by telomeric repeat amplification protocol, and the telomere restriction fragment (TRF) length was measured by Telomere Length Assay Kit and Southern blotting. The correlation between expression of telomerase activity and the TRF length ratio (TRFLR) using the tumor-to-normal TRFLR (t/n TRFLR) was examined.
RESULTS
Positive telomerase activity was observed in 48 (60.8%) of the tumor tissue samples and in 5 (6.3%) of the normal tissue samples (P < 0.0001). The mean TRF lengths were 5.32+/-1.53 kb in normal tissue samples and 3.95+/-1.92 kb in tumor tissue samples, respectively (P = 0.0001). The 4-year cumulative survival rates of lower t/n TRFLR (< or = 75%) and higher t/n TRFLR (>75%) patients were 69.2 and 41.2%, respectively (P = 0.0227). Independent prognostic factors include t/n TRFLR (P = 0.014), T-status (P = 0.027), and N-status (P = 0.020) of the tumor.
CONCLUSIONS
Our data suggest that there is a good correlation between the t/n TRFLR and expression of telomerase activity. A higher t/n TRFLR may indicate that the tumor regains its ability to repair the telomere lost and escapes the apoptosis scenario, which is subsequently reflected in poorer patient outcomes.
Publication
Journal: Japanese journal of cancer research : Gann
January/14/1998
Abstract
Telomerase is a key enzyme with regard to immortalization of cancer cells and increased activity has been demonstrated in various human malignant neoplasms. Since little is known of its role in pancreatic cancers, we investigated changes in telomerase activity in human pancreatic duct adenocarcinomas and compared the frequency of increased telomerase activity with the presence of K-ras gene mutations. The samples were obtained from 38 pancreatic duct adenocarcinomas and 7 tumor surrounding tissues at surgical resection. Telomerase activity was examined by telomeric repeat amplification protocol assay and terminal restriction fragment (TRF) length was examined by Southern analysis. K-ras mutation was examined by means of polymerase chain reaction-single strand conformation polymorphism analysis. Among 38 pancreatic carcinomas, 32 (84%) exhibited increased telomerase activities with no apparent relation to the histological type of tumor, tumor size, regional lymphnode involvement and distant metastasis or clinical stage. In tissue surrounding the tumor, telomerase activity was not detected. TRF length tended to be reduced in pancreatic carcinomas. Mutations of K-ras gene were found in 24 out of the 38 (63%) cases. Among the 38 cases, 14 showed increased telomerase activity without K-ras mutation and 4 cases showed K-ras mutation without telomerase activity. These results suggest that increased telomerase activity might be a sensitive genetic diagnostic marker and could be a target for future therapy of pancreatic duct carcinomas.
Publication
Journal: Stem Cells and Development
April/14/2011
Abstract
Embryonic stem cell (ESC) research gave rise to the possibility that stem cell therapy could be used in the treatment of incurable diseases such as neurodegenerative disorders. However, problems related to the tumorigenicity of undifferentiated ESCs must be resolved before such cells can be used in the application of cell replacement therapies. In the present study, we attempted to determine biomarkers that predicted tumor formation of undifferentiated ESCs in vivo. We differentiated mouse ESCs (R1 cell line) into neural lineage using a 5-step method, and evaluated the expression of oncogenes (p53, Bax, c-myc, Bcl2, K-ras), telomerase-related genes (TERT, TRF), and telomerase activity and telomere length during differentiation of ESCs. The expression of oncogenes did not show a significant change during differentiation steps, but the expression of telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) and telomerase activity correlated with mouse ESCs differentiation. To investigate the possibility of mouse TERT (mTERT) as a biomarker of tumorigenicity of undifferentiated ESCs, we established mTERT knockdown ESCs using the shRNA lentivirus vector and evaluated its tumorigenicity in vivo using nude mice. Tumor volumes significantly decreased, and appearances of tumor formation in mice were delayed in the TERT-knockdown ESC treated group compared with the undifferentiated ESC treated group. Altogether, these results suggested that mTERT might be potentially beneficial as a biomarker, rather than oncogenes of somatic cells, for the assessment of ESCs tumorigenicity.
Publication
Journal: Blood
July/28/2004
Abstract
In this study we investigated telomere restriction fragment (TRF) length in a panel of mature B-cell lymphoproliferative disorders (MBCLDs) and correlated this parameter with histology and histopathogenesis in relation to the germinal center (GC). We assessed 123 MBCLD samples containing 80% or more tumor cells. TRF length was evaluated by Southern blot analysis using a chemiluminescence-based assay. GC status was assessed through screening for stable and ongoing somatic mutations within the immunoglobulin heavy-chain genes. Median TRF length was 6170 bp (range, 1896-11 200 bp) and did not correlate with patient age or sex. TRF length was greater in diffuse large cell lymphoma, Burkitt lymphoma, and follicular lymphoma (medians: 7789 bp, 9471 bp, and 7383 bp, respectively) than in mantle cell lymphoma and chronic lymphocytic leukemia (medians: 3582 bp and 4346 bp, respectively). GC-derived MBCLDs had the longest telomeres, whereas those arising from GC-inexperienced cells had the shortest (P < 10(-9)). We conclude that (1) TRF length in MBCLD is highly heterogeneous; (2) GC-derived tumors have long telomeres, suggesting that minimal telomere erosion occurs during GC-derived lymphomagenesis; and (3) the short TRF lengths of GC-inexperienced MBCLDs indicates that these neoplasms are good candidates for treatment with telomerase inhibitors, a class of molecules currently the subject of extensive preclinical evaluation.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Biomedical Optics
March/28/2013
Abstract
Tissue diagnostic features generated by a bimodal technique integrating scanning time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy (TRFS) and ultrasonic backscatter microscopy (UBM) are investigated in an in vivo hamster oral carcinoma model. Tissue fluorescence is excited by a pulsed nitrogen laser and spectrally and temporally resolved using a set of filters/dichroic mirrors and a fast digitizer, respectively. A 41-MHz focused transducer (37-μm axial, 65-μm lateral resolution) is used for UBM scanning. Representative lesions of the different stages of carcinogenesis show that fluorescence characteristics complement ultrasonic features, and both correlate with histological findings. These results demonstrate that TRFS-UBM provide a wealth of co-registered, complementary data concerning tissue composition and structure as it relates to disease status. The direct co-registration of the TRFS data (sensitive to surface molecular changes) with the UBM data (sensitive to cross-sectional structural changes and depth of tumor invasion) is expected to play an important role in pre-operative diagnosis and intra-operative determination of tumor margins.
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